I don't know about the rest of you, but I am always been drawn into the world of the novel I'm reading. The characters, the plot, the narrative style. Why does every day life suddenly seem particularly bleak, or paradoxical or meaningless? Often it takes time for me to realise that I am seeing everything through the prism of my current novelist.
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- 2007-12-11 @ 22:52:59
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- 2007-12-11 @ 23:02:08
Indeed. Often, TKK, I wonder if you could be a figmant of my imagination.
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- 2007-12-11 @ 23:57:22
I shall refrain from suggesting Lolita or even One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Nurse Ratched I think). But who wants an uncomplicated woman?
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- 2007-12-12 @ 07:33:33
Not me. Perhaps complicated does not belong in this list.
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- http://www.febland.net/
- 2007-12-12 @ 00:09:51
hmm, a novel with 'a nice uncomplicated heroine' I will have to sleep on that one!
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- 2007-12-12 @ 07:56:19
I await, breath bated, for you to awake
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- http://www.blog.co.uk/user/ohlala007/
- 2007-12-12 @ 02:55:54
As you know, Nabokov disliked Dostoevsky, regarding his writings as poor. For a long time I could not understand why. But once, ten years back I read a French shocker of the late 19th century--and what I could see there? The characters of the book comport themselves like Dostoevsky’s characters. And I understood all. You see, Dostoevsky’s women as well as all the rest characters are not Russian people; Russians never comport themselves like Dostoevsky’s characters. Dostoevsky’s characters are not Russian people, and they are not French people either. It’s just the French theater stage, which was so popular at Dostoevsky’s time, and which he used to promote his ideas. Comedie Francais, no more.
Just a part of my meditations on the subject--most interesting subject, by the way.
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- 2007-12-12 @ 07:54:41
But, perhaps, in the context of other novels being written at the time in Britain or France, D's heroines were three dimensional, sexual and convincing - or seemed so to me, teeagge student. My deep, stubborn loathing of Dickens, aquired at this time, springs from his refusal or inability to give his women (or men) any convincing sexual desire
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- 2007-12-14 @ 13:53:29
I've seen that happen to me also when i'm reading a novel. When I read older novels which have a lot of old english I find myself wanted to speak in Ye Olde English and my friend look at me like I am the nucase they have always expected me to be!
I think it's nice to throw yourself into the novel and really feel them. It shows how good they are, but yes, I can see how getting too into th novels could actually be quite leading when it came to choices in life etc. -
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- 2007-12-15 @ 11:56:39
Interesting subject particularly because, ashamed as I am to say this, I've been inlove with a fictional character for many many years. And like you, either consciously or subconsciously, I look for qualities he has in potential lovers.
As for reading material, I'd suggest some literature that strips woman bare of personality and renders her an automaton of pleasure. Sade's your best bet. Alternatively, for something defferent altogether, you could read A Boy's Own Story by Edmund White.
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- 2007-12-15 @ 19:09:34
Fantastic! At last some positive suggestions. A Boy's Own Story is the next book for me.
In fact I got my summation of D's women wrong - Sonya in C&P is actually very uncomplicated. If I summon the energy I will write more on the subject later.
I assume that you will not disclose you will not disclose the fictional character you are in love with?
timekillingkid

And to think a blogger once tagged you with 'Raskolnikov complex'.
What a perceptive chap. Assuming it was a fella.