Blogs

Please use categories and/or tags when writing your blog posts. Use categories to indicate the author (e.g. Azuela or García Márquez etc.), and tags for key concepts or topics covered. Remember also to include a question for discussion.


Week 7 – One Hundred Years of Solitude Part 1

Posted by: jtatham3

This week’s reading has definitely been the most intriguing book for me so far. This novel, its many characters, and seemingly endless interwoven plots and backstories that are so odd (perhaps outlandish is a better word) are like nothing I have read and created an entirely new world with every page I read. I do, […] read full post >>
Tagged with:

Thought 7: Many Metaphors With A Mix of Insanity and Incest

Posted by: Curtis

Hi all, This week I talk about Insanity, Incest, the Repetition of History and Houses (wut??) in One Hundred Years of Solitude. Question: What do you think the book is trying to say about technology? Is there a stance, for or against, that is being promoted? How do you explain the insanity of Jose Arcadio … read full post >>
Tagged with: , ,

Week 6: Pedro Páramo and the Company of Death

Posted by: marisa ortiz

I was so excited to begin Pedro Páramo this week. I decided to amend my contract and add it as a text last minute and I’m so glad I did. I knew I was in for a treat when the librarian at Vancouver Public Library in Kits stopped me to gush over the book as […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
Tagged with:

The Kingdom of this World

Posted by: Clandestino

Lost, one is found. That is how I felt reading this book until I read the afterword; then everything made sense. I have to admit that I was very tired while reading the book but some of my intuitions were in tune, but, as always, my mind blurred whatever intuition remained while sleep-reading. That original […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs
Tagged with:

week 6: Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo

Posted by: KD

Right at the start of the novel I found myself enjoying Rulfo's style of storytelling. The balance between descriptive imagery and concise narration eased my way in to reading this novel. It is clear to the reader that Juan is completing his deceased m... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
Tagged with:

week 6: Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo

Posted by: KD

Right at the start of the novel I found myself enjoying Rulfo's style of storytelling. The balance between descriptive imagery and concise narration eased my way in to reading this novel. It is clear to the reader that Juan is completing his deceased m... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
Tagged with:

Blog #6 – Pedro Páramo

Posted by: Cadence

    When I first began reading Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo I felt a wave of relief that I was able to easily follow the first bit of the book. That relief soon turned to slight confusion as I found myself rereading passages and struggling... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs
Tagged with:

Blog #6 – Pedro Páramo

Posted by: Cadence

    When I first began reading Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo I felt a wave of relief that I was able to easily follow the first bit of the book. That relief soon turned to slight confusion as I found myself rereading passages and struggling... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs
Tagged with:

Juan Ruflo’s Pedro Páramo

Posted by: diana

Reflecting on my experience with this week’s reading, Juan Rulfo’s “Pedro Páramo,” I can only describe it as challenging. Despite my initial excitement to delve into what I expected to be a concise narrative at an overview, seeing that it lacked traditional chapter breaks and was fairly short, I soon discovered it would be yet … read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs

Week 6 – Carpentier, “The Kingdom of This World”

Posted by: daniel choi

Alejo Carpentier’s The Kingdom of this World was an exciting read. The novel touched upon interesting themes like colonialism, revolution, race, slavery, power dynamics, and, most importantly, magic realism—which I have placed most thought towards while reading. The novel is a masterful example of magic realism, blending the real and the surreal to create a […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Carpentier
Tagged with: