As I am getting
older and faced with life’s challenges, I realize that much of what I thought was
important for my younger self is
rendered utterly irrelevant by the passing of time. Meanings shift and change. Tony
Webster, a retired middle-aged divorcee and narrator of The Sense of an Ending , comes to a similar realization.
The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes is a compact, contemporary
novel of only 150 pages, but jampacked with a skillfully plotted story about
friendship, youth suicide, eros (sexual love) and thanatos (death), loss, affairs,
pregnancy, remorse, the complexity of the human heart, the fragmentary nature
of memory, the passage of time, and with a strong mystery at the core of
it. "History
is that certainty produced at the point where the imperfections of memory meet
the inadequacies of documentation." p.59
A warning though,
its effect can be disturbing, leaving you unsettled and frustrated once you
reach the story’s ending. The enigmas, as well as the stunning psychological
and emotional depth it offers sum up the pleasure of the book. No wonder it
gained the reputation for being the book that you must read twice to search "sense" in a hazy "ending".
A rainy week
ahead of us calls for more books on my nightstand. Here’s what’s on my October
reading list:
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
A lengthy novel
that keeps me awake at nights. I challenge you to tackle its 864 gripping pages!
However, if you are not up to the challenge, you could pickup Tartt’s other
slightly shorter but equally acclaimed novel, The Secret History.
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
Another mystery
novel with plot twists and a grand finale that I am itching to discover before
watching the movie, which has hit the big screen in Greece.
Now it’s your
turn! Please
let me know of any books you highly recommend.
Have a good read and a wonderful week!
Have a good read and a wonderful week!
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