more farting and funnines
Review of Gargantua - Francois Rabelais by
lewiscrofts
Advantages: gags
Disadvantages: obscurity
Written second in the series although chronologically this book takes up the first movements in the epic tales of Rabelais. The giants flounder around France urinating on Paris, eating humans, waging war on cake-makers, giving birth out of their ears and vomiting and drinking at will. This is a slightly more mature work than “Pantagruel” and has the same persuasion towards humanist education and learning and is interesting for that very reason. I ...
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helpful

17.07.2000
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Tess; our heroine!
Review of Tess of the D'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy by
sweetfilth
Advantages: A great read!
Disadvantages: A very unpleasant end.
Tess of the D'Urbervilles is one of my favourite Thomas Hardy novels, simply because the story is so unique and captivating. Ii read this over the summer and I can assure you that you also will enjoy the book. The price is very little and is definately worth having in your collection. However, those who are new to Thomas Hardy I must warn you that his work is often padded out with excessive details. This however does not ruin the story. The story ... ...invites you to sympathize with all that Tess is and all that she goes through. I highly recommend this novel, although it may not have a pleasant ending it is very interesting and meaningful! I must add that any woman intending on reading this you are surely to love it! ...
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somewhat helpful

01.10.2008
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Pleasing professor
Review of The Professor - Charlotte Bronte by
crezzie
Advantages: descriptions and not intimidating storylines
Disadvantages: maybe the french conversations for some people
Being a fan of the Bronte clan the first section I head to in my local library would be of that shelf. It was only a very short time ago that I discovered The Professor, not even realising Charlotte Bronte had written it. Indeed, ashamedly to admit, I had never even heard of it before then.
It was created before Jane Eyre came about from the year 1845-6 and is an intimate and gentle story about William Crimsworth, a man working for his not quite ... ...to an 'older woman' from the adjoining girls school, it is only when he is appointed the position of teaching the young ladies to become better at speaking, writing and reading english that he discovers her cruel manipulations towards other peoples feelings and current situations.
The girls he teaches and how he reactes to their behaviour is similar to that of Lucy Snow in Villette. As to where he mocks the written work of the prettiest and unruley ...
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very helpful

25.09.2008
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Putting class to classics
Review of Dracula - Bram Stoker by
scarletpurity
Advantages: Some intriguing characters and great Gothic settings
Disadvantages: Sometimes too verbose in wrong places
Dracula (1897) by Bram Stoker puts class to classics! Set in Victorian England and rather fictionalized fairytale Transylvania, Stoker´s lengthy novel is a story of a group of heavily idealized Victorian chaps, led by Dutch Professor Van Helsing, who try to save their womenfolk from a vampire king, Transylvanian Count Dracula (NOT Walachian prince Vlad of the most modern retellings!). Mixing the castles and graveyards, Victorian idyll and authentic ... ...vampire complexion), Stoker creates delicious backdrop to his most interesting characters Mina and Lucy, the feminine and pure "angels in house", who are vampirized by the Count. But who is saved in the end? And who dies? The prose is very Victorian, sometimes long-winded, and dehumanization of "lunatics" takes too much time, but great parts overshadow the morally polluted pedantry. ...
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somewhat helpful

19.09.2008
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That infamous novel
Review of Lady Chatterley's Lover - D.H. Lawrence by
tac20
Advantages: a 'classic', an interesting book to talk about, pretty short
Disadvantages: rather tiresome to read
...the voluptuous Connie as his Lady Chatterley. She does not conform to the slight proportions of the period, but instead represents a natural 'real' woman who is portrayed from the start as being slightly out of place in Sir Clifford Chatterley's aristocratic world.
After a very dull introduction, briefly interrupted with some atmospheric descriptions of the industrial English midlands, Lawrence allows the reader to follow Connie on her own personal ... ...of Connie's position as a Lady of the manor at that point in time, or whether I think she's just dishonest… It's a difficult one to call.
Aside from Connie's non-sexual relationship with her husband, the rest of the novel is indeed purely about sex. Either Connie is thinking about sex, planning sex, remembering sex or having it. This might sound wonderfully erotic and exciting, but trust me its drearily dull. Lawrence's prose is slow and I felt, ...
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very helpful

18.09.2008
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