Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Milan Kundera (1)

The Joke by Milan Kundera

March 17, 2023 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

“So here I was. Home again after all those years.” This is Milan Kundera’s first novel, and of all the one’s I’ve read it’s more or less the most straightforward. It’s not straightforward, but the conditions of the plot are. We meet Ludvik in the opening pages returning home to a small town in Moravia some seventeen years since he’s last been there. We know something has defined this return in ways that have complicated it, but we’re not year sure how. We also learn […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: milan kundera

vel veeter's CBR15 Review No:178 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: milan kundera ·
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The Book of Laughter and Forgetting

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting by Milan Kundera

March 1, 2022 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

Maybe living under an oppressive authoritarian regime provides some clarity. Maybe it doesn’t, but one of the things I find fascinating about overt (and especially real world) novel that take place within these kinds of regimes is that I can never truly understand how life happens there. I don’t mean the parts that happen in reaction to the regime itself. So reading a dystopian novel like 1984 or Hunger Games isn’t what I mean. Or even a real-world text like Darkness at Noon is still […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: milan kundera

vel veeter's CBR14 Review No:86 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: milan kundera ·
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He was afraid of offending her because he was suddenly afraid of everything.

The Farewell Waltz by Milan Kundera

September 16, 2019 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

An earlyish novel by Milan Kundera, this story takes place in a spa town over the course of several days. We meet Rusenka, a nurse at the spa who has recently realized she is pregnant, and Klima, a trumpeter who has gotten Rusenka pregnant, and spends the bulk of the novel trying to get out of getting her pregnant. This novel, like a lot of Milan Kundera novels, also involves a host of ancillary characters whose own problems interweave what I would consider to be […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: farewell waltz, milan kundera

vel veeter's CBR11 Review No:517 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: farewell waltz, milan kundera ·
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There Is No Perfection, Only Life

The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera

March 19, 2019 by blauracke Leave a Comment

During the Cold War, a Prague surgeon meets a waitress and spends a night with her. A lifelong relationship begins, although the two protagonists could not be more different in their views on love. In a subplot we also follow one of the surgeon’s mistresses, who is a successful painter, and her married lover, a Swiss university professor. The historical background is shaped by the Prague Spring and the following invasion of the ČSSR by the armies of the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: milan kundera

blauracke's CBR11 Review No:14 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: milan kundera ·
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All novels . . . are concerned with the enigma of the self. As soon as you create an imaginary being, a character, you are automatically confronted by the question: what is the self? How can it be grasped?

May 29, 2018 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

The Art of the Novel – 4/5 Stars In the same way that the Annie Dillard and Vivian Gornick books provide an analysis of reading and also a reading list, this too gave me a lot to consider and more to read. First, I even went out and bought a copy of Witold Gombrowicz’s Ferdydurke, and will be more resolved to read Robert Musil’s The Man without Qualities, Kafka’s The Castle, and Jaroslav Hasek’s The Good Soldier Svejk in the near future. I also have […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: milan kundera, the art of the novel

vel veeter's CBR10 Review No:167 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: milan kundera, the art of the novel ·
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And think about the precise meaning of that term: a Narcissus is not proud. A proud man has disdain for other people, he undervalues them. The Narcissus overvalues them, because in every person’s eyes he sees his own image, and wants to embellish it. So he takes nice care of all his mirrors.

March 29, 2018 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

To account for this novel, you have to think through how the title and the keyword “insignificance” play out here. It’s a short novel, and it’s a novel of light touches. The structure is not all that dissimilar from The Unbearable Lightness of Being, with expats living in a foreign land being checked in upon by the author as narrator. Here, we have a similar story…a various sort of people living in Paris in more or less contemporary times. They are friends, they talk about life, […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: milan kundera, the festival of insignificance

vel veeter's CBR10 Review No:79 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: milan kundera, the festival of insignificance ·
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Recent Comments

  • Zirza on A Gothic Classic for a ReasonIt's one of those wish-you-could-read-it-again-for-the-first-time books. I loved it.
  • Emmalita on “It came to something when you found yourself hoping that the footsteps you heard were ghosts.”I loved the ending! I don’t think it’s been out long enough to talk about why though.
  • Dixie on Track Her Down by Melinda LeighI am just starting Track Her Down and I have read them all in order till now and thought I...
  • Roland of Gilead on How can you give us the gift of a crazy character named Rando Thoughtful and then just as suddenly take that gift away? We need to talk, Uncle Stevie.I came across this randomly years after it was written because I was searching "Random Thoughtful. But I have the...
  • Emmalita on “Only you, Em, would refer to heartbreak as a distraction. I think I would have a more sympathetic response if I asked to marry a bookcase.”Oh my goodness, Gallifrey was beautiful. I’m sure her mittens were gloriously murdery.
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