Both accurate statements. Dude should have married the qt that was interested in him instead of wasting his life away with a bunch of other dumb incels.
Well put. I kept it, look at it on my shelf every once in a while, but I'm quite sure I'll never read it again. That it applies so vitally (irony of ironies) to living now or whenever will keep it.. alive.
Depression-vibes like "The Dwarf" or "On the Marble Cliffs". There's something hopeless about interwar novels that I can't really identify, but it makes them feel the same to me.
very easy to feel identified with the main character. To me the ending had a different interpretation than the obvious one. It gives hope to anybody with a worthless life. He redeems by accepting the world in its whole nature, completely beyond his control. Being a loser is also part of the world and to accept that with dignity, as he does in the very very end when praying, is a positive, hidden message
>Early this year >Told myself this would be the year I break out of my rut and try new things, change the course of my average but dull existence >Felt a burning passion >Branched out, met new people, left the house more >Eventually settle back into a lull, into the dull rhythm of everyday life >Stopped going out as much >All the sudden it’s the middle of July and the year is half over >In 2 years I’ll be 30 >My twenties are dwindling and I have nothing to show for it but a job and an apartment >Still telling myself that things will change soon
This book is horrifyingly accurate
nothing
Both accurate statements. Dude should have married the qt that was interested in him instead of wasting his life away with a bunch of other dumb incels.
These two are right.
God tier italian literature
A light but depressive novel, like a Kafka fot aunts.
I want to read this next, I've heard it is miserable
It's not that bad it's the literary equivalent of this:
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/eWksOjgSfZ8
somehow it was a real page turner despite being about boredom.
it is not in any way like that
>I've heard it is miserable
When did people become such mentally weak losers?
It’s one of the scariest books I’v ever read.
waiting
It scratched my itch well
A great book, but you should read Waiting for Godot instead
The best book that I'll never read again.
Well put. I kept it, look at it on my shelf every once in a while, but I'm quite sure I'll never read it again. That it applies so vitally (irony of ironies) to living now or whenever will keep it.. alive.
While gazing at it this evening I realized it was on one of my most IQfy shelves....
You have great taste
Hand over that copy of Darconville's cat and no one gets hurt.
Just read it.
Depression-vibes like "The Dwarf" or "On the Marble Cliffs". There's something hopeless about interwar novels that I can't really identify, but it makes them feel the same to me.
and read waiting for the barbarians
Tartar Steppe is one of my favorite books, however I found Waiting for the Barbarians to be painfully boring and dull.
Angustina is a hero
i regard this above all else
the greatest book in my mind
A book that kills the passive person
very easy to feel identified with the main character. To me the ending had a different interpretation than the obvious one. It gives hope to anybody with a worthless life. He redeems by accepting the world in its whole nature, completely beyond his control. Being a loser is also part of the world and to accept that with dignity, as he does in the very very end when praying, is a positive, hidden message
>Early this year
>Told myself this would be the year I break out of my rut and try new things, change the course of my average but dull existence
>Felt a burning passion
>Branched out, met new people, left the house more
>Eventually settle back into a lull, into the dull rhythm of everyday life
>Stopped going out as much
>All the sudden it’s the middle of July and the year is half over
>In 2 years I’ll be 30
>My twenties are dwindling and I have nothing to show for it but a job and an apartment
>Still telling myself that things will change soon
This book is horrifyingly accurate
A book that most people misinterpret. Since you're asking IQfy to tell you what to expect, odds are you won't get it either.
Enlighten IQfy then
no, you do enlight us with your understanding so we can see if it is as the anon says: 'expected'