2013年6月27日木曜日
THE FISHERMAN FROM CHIHUAHUA by Evan S. Connell
This is a strange story. It ends without any particular conclusion. Rather it leaves the reader in mystery. Pendleton is a normal man while the Toltec and Damaso are peccentrics. The reader identifies with Pendleton. He fails to know who Damasois. On the other hand, the Toltec seems to be uninterested in Damaso but interested in dancing and playing the nickelodeon.Some interpret that Damaso is Jesus Christ.
In conclusion I was not so much moved in reading the book.
2013年6月9日日曜日
The Letter by Barnard Malabud
The contrast between the relation between Newman and his father and the relation between Teddy and his father Ralph is interesting.
An insane man does not want to communicate with his father; while an
insane man wants to communicate with his father.
Newman is a normal young man. He does not want to communicate with
his father who spend his life in an insane hospital as his words shows: “Do you want to have next
Sunday off?”
Teddy is an insane man, but he wants to communicate with his
father, also insane, through letters though they are blank.
The loan by Barnard Malabud
Lieb
the baker is an innocent, honest, and easy-to-believe old man. His old friend,
Kobotsky is a cunning, bad man.
One
day Kobosky visits Lieb to ask him for 200 dollars. Although Lieb has a bitter
memory with him because Kobosky has not returned 100 dollars, he forgives
Kobosky and tries to lend him the money.
While Lieb was talking
with his wife about the loan, Kobosky “wet his half his handkerchief and held
it to his dry eyes.” He even pares his fingernails. He tells he wants the money
to build a tombstone for his wife. At which Lieb is moved and wants to lend him
money.
But LIeb’s wife, Bessie,
refuses the loan telling Kobosky how miserable a life they have been leading.
Giving up the scheme,
Koboskey leaves Lieb, after Lieb and Kobosky press their mouths.”
The story reveals as you
read it that the three have gone through bitter poverty. As the conjugation “Haben,
hatte, gehabt” suggests, both Lieb and Kobosky immigrate from Russia to Germany
and then come to live in the United States. They must have spent a happy
childhood. Bessie, a jew from Warsaw, went to Germany and then to the United
States to marry Lieb. Her brother and his family end their lives in Hitler’s incinerators.
The
story makes the reader sympathize with the miserable lives they had to go
through. Even Kobosky’s made-up story can’t compete with the true miserable story
Bessie tells.
The
writer himself is a jew. So he might have condemned Hitler’s atrocity through “The
loan.”
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