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dely in 2017: books and challenges
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Uche
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Oct 12, 2017 06:51AM

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Aren't there libraries or bookshops where you live? Or maybe you can buy a book online or ask a friend if he can borrow you a book.


I didn't finish this book. I've read a long introduction but when the story started I gave up after the first paragraph. (Also the introduction was pretty boring for me) It really isn't my cup of tea and I don't want to waste my time reading books I know I won't like. This has been a gift from a friend but despite this I won't force myself to read it.
I decided to skip also the two volumes of Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. I have the German editions, downloaded for free from Amazon. I tried to read them but I can't concentrate so maybe I will keep them on my kindle for better times or I will buy the Italian edition. I should stop downloading for free classics I don't know if and when I will read.


English edition: Skylark Farm by Antonia Arslan
This book talks about the Armenian genocide and the author is a descendant of a survivor. I liked the book and it was also very moving but for me there was something lucking. I don't know if it's because it's too short and I wanted more, or because some parts go on too fast as if there's a "hole" between what happened first and what was happening later. I however recommend it if someone wants to read about this genocide, though about the same topic I preferred The Forty Days of Musa Dagh by Franz Werfel.


English edition: The New Gods by Emil M. Cioran
I tried to read this book a few years ago, gave up, and now I tried again for my challenge to finish books I already own. I have read the first 3-4 pages of every chapter (everyone about a different topic) but it's not my cup of tea.


To tell the truth it's a 3,5*.
This isn't part of any challenge, but seen that a few days ago I have read Skylark Farm, I wanted to see what would happen next to this Armenian family during the genocide committed by the Turks. This is in fact the follow-up of Skylark Farm but sadly there isn't an English translation.
I liked also this book, it was more flowing respect to the first one, also written better, but it wasn't as moving as the first one and I felt the characters pretty distant. I was involved with what happened to them but not as much as with the first book.
Only Italian review: /review/show...


English edition: Insurgent Mexico by John Reed
An interesting and enthralling non-fiction about the Mexican revolution of 1913-1914 and his leader Pancho Villa.
My English review: /review/show...
Also part of my challenge books I already own: it was in my to-read list since 2013.



No English edition, sadly.
The author of this book is an Italian reporter and journalist, and a few years ago he decided to follow the so called "route of slaves", the route that Africans have to do to come to Europe as illegal immigrants. He disguided himself as a tuareg so that people couldn't see that he was white, so he could be a witness of what south-saharian Africans have to endure to arrive to Libia and then from here try to arrive in Europe. They have to cross the Sahara desert, they don't always arrive alive, they are tortured, they are robbed by police and soldiers, women and young girls are also obliged to prostitute themselves to earn some money and continue their trip. Sometimes they are left without passport so they don't receive the help of anyone. The author has been saved more than once by his Italian passport otherwise he would have been tortured and robbed too. When it became to risky, he said that he was Italian to save himself but also those that were with him because the police didn't want that people in Europe see what is really going on in Africa along these routes.
When they are in Libia, they have to take a boat to arrive to Lampedusa, a small island of Sicily (Italy). These boats are not good boats, a lot of them sink, or if there is a rough sea they don't always arrive on the Italian coast. During their whole trip there are "slave-drivers" that ask money for everything, also to go on such dangerous boats. In Libia the refuge houses are like prisons where those people have no rights and are tortured. If they try to work to earn some money and continue their trip, they aren't paid or they are underpaid.
Well, some of them manage to arrive to Lampedusa, but their ordeal doesn't finish here. In Lampedusa there is another of those refuge for illigal immigrants (the author was able to enter it as an illegal immigrant) and this was a hard part too for me to read, because I didn't know that our police behaved so badly and in a inhuman way with those poor people.
The journey goes on because the author (saying he was an Iraqi Kurd), receives a paper that he has to leave Italy. Of course he doesn't leave Italy, but tries to find out what happens of all those people that receive that piece of paper. Of course no one of them goes away after such a difficult trip that lasts also months. So looking for a job, there are people who continue to exploit them: they have to work for several hours a day, reduced to slavery, sometimes they also don't receive an earning or only a very small earning. This way they are obliged to continue working as slaves because they don't want to go back to Africa, and being illegal immigrants they can't seek help because police would arrest them and send them back to their country. A lot of them also die because of the hard work, no food and sometimes also no water in summer. If they try to rise up, they are also killed.
This only a short summary of the book. Kudos to the author that has been that brave to do this long journey with those people, that had to shut up in front of abuses of the police otherwise they would have find out that he was an Italian that gave wrong personal details (in Italy he had to do as if he doesn't understand Italian) and he would have been arrested and couldn't go on with his researches. But I have to say that he tried to help the others as good as he could, though he was tempted more than once to cry out loud to don't torture those people.
I have cried a lot reading this book and I felt ashamed about how some police officers behave. I really didn't think there could be such inhuman people among our police. Shame also on Italy for their laws that don't protect enough illegal immigrants and shame on Italy for the agreements with Libia that made the whole situation of illegal immigrants even worse. Shame on all the European countries that don't want to help as they could and instead of helping, these xenophobes try to increase fear and racism in common people. Then they send money to Libia and other North African countries to stop illegal emigration, knowing perfectly what happens to that money.

Thanks Bette. I wanted to write only a couple of sentences, as I usually do, but at the end I said a lot not saying enough about this book.


No English edition.
It's a self-help (I didn't know it before reading it) and I don't like a lot self-help books. The title could be translated with The Grieves of Childhood.
Only Italian review: /review/show...


English edition: City of Thieves by David Benioff
3* means that I liked it but at the end I thought there were too many clichés and several things were not credible.
Only Italian review: /review/show...
And with this book I completed my challenge to read 40 books in 2017!


English edition: The Lives of Others by Neel Mukherjee
3,5* I liked it though in the middle it was a little bit too slow and dragging.
My very short English opinions about it: /review/show...
Part of my IR-challenge to read 5 books set in India or by in Indian author. Only 3 to go to complete also this challenge but it will be nearly impossible till the end of the year.


No English edition. It's a book about the "sacred line" of Saint Michael Archangel. Very interesting! It talks about Saint Michael in the bible, his worship, the prayers, and then of course of the seven sanctuaries dedicated to him: the appearances that led to their construction, some legends about these places and their architecture.
For who doesn't know what the sacred line is, here two links:


English edition: The Glass Palace by Amitav Ghosh
Historical fiction about Burma. Very interesting and engrossing.
My English review: /review/show...


English edition: The Moor's Last Sigh by Salman Rushdie
I didn't enjoy this book at all. It's a pity because I really loved Midnight Children so I hoped this one would be good to.
First of all it loses with the translation. The author plays a lot with words and the wit is lost with the translation. There were also several words in Maharati (? or Hindi?) that were not translated so I wasn't always able to understand a sentence. There are also too many references and cutting remarks to politicians, Bollywood actors or happenings, that a non-Indian can't always understand.
I also didn't like the writing style. The sentences were too long and at the end of a sentence I didn't know what he was talking about (too many subordinates didn't help to understand).
But with this book I completed my challenge to read 5 books for the IR group challenge, i.e. books written by Indians or set in India.
Only Italian review: /review/show...


English edition: Complete Fairy Tales & Stories by Hans Christian Andersen
Started in March, I finally finished the Complete Tales by Hans Christian Andersen. Some stories are very good, others less, and there were also boring tales. I didn't enjoy it that much though some stories are very moving. It has more than 1000 pages and though I've read it in 10 months, only a few tales at the same time, it started beeing too dragging.
Also part of my challenge to read books I already own. It was in my to-read list since 2014 and I finally read it from March to December 2017, a few tales between a book and another.
Only one book to go to finish this challenge. I hope to start it this year and maybe finish it in January (if I will like it, otherwise I give up).
Only Italian review: /review/show...


No English edition and it is a pity because I think a lot of people would like this book. The translated title could be "My name is not Miriam".
It talks about the holocaust, but this time we don't have the point of view of a Jew, but that of a gypsy girl. Reading this book I could learn also about their holocaust. For them it was even worse because they were considered bad people by everyone, also by Jews, so they had to be left separated from Jews. Also after the war, they didn't receive a reimbursement as it happened with Jews and they couldn't talk about their experience with everyone because considered bad and unwanted people by a lot of countries. Maybe someone was also glad that a lot of them had beed sterminated.
Well, Miriam was that gypsy girl that, by a fortuitous fate, while deported from Auschwitz to Ravensbrück, wore the dress of a dead Jewish girl because her dress was totally lacerated, so she was since then always with the Jews. For her whole life she decided to hide her real name and her origin because she knew she would have never been accepted or helped even when the war was over and she had been brought to Sweden. Racism against gypsies was also there.
This book doesn't lessen what Jews have gone through, absolutely not (also because Miriam, the main character, lives among Jews in Ravensbrück). But the author wanted to talk also about other ethnic groups that had to endure the holocaust but no one knows about it.
It's a very interesting and moving book though some parts were repetitive (for ex. that Miriam had to hide her secret if she wanted to survive and to be accepted and helped after the war is repeated a zillion times).

I started an Italian edition but it was full of missing letters and sometimes also entire words were missing, so it was impossible to read.
I switched to a German edition, have read 3% of it but it's too difficult for a not native speaker. Since the book has more than 1000 pages, I really don't want to torture myself. I also won't buy another Italian edition because it isn't a book I'm still interested to read.
This was also my last book for my challenge to read books I already own. I'm free! :D


No English edition. The title could be "The Humanity of Faith".
I downloaded it for free and though it was short, it was very interesting. It shows how faith should "humanize" human beings, but also that faith shouldn't be that rigid and strict, but it needs to be humanized.


English edition: The Last Days of a Condemned; Bug-Jargal. Claude Gueux by Victor Hugo
I have read only one story and I don't know if I will read also the other two. My edition is in French and though I hadn't problems reading it, I always prefer to read in my mothertongue.
English review: /review/show...

Here the topic reminds me even more of Les Misérables. Claude Geux is a convicted: he had stolen because hungry and to feed his wife and child. It's a very short story but the descriptions of Claude and the prison director are just marvellous and Hugo is able to point out his ideas.
I have added another piece to my English review: /review/show...


No English edition.
The book talks about a young guy that during his adolescence follows Fascism, but then realizes it isn't what the thought. There are the first years of Fascism, the war, and then the years after the war in Italy.
It's a too short book so both the story and the characters aren't well depicted.
It's an old book I had at home and that I hadn't read yet.
Only Italian: /review/show...


English edition: The story of a humble Christian by Ignazio Silone
The book is written like a play but it reads like fiction. It talks about Pope Celestine V, how he became Pope, why he was it only for a couple of months, and what happened next.
The author puts in this book the difference between the Church as a constitution and a humble believer. The Church corrupted and who wanted always more power, the believer following the Gospels.
I don't think it's a book only for believers, because the story of this pope and that of the Church could be interesting for anyone. It is set at the end of the 13th century and the author wrote it after several researches about this pope.
This is another one of those old books I have at home and that I don't remember if I have already read in the past and forgot about it.

Stats:
read 50 books
pages 17,042
longest book: The Complete Fairy Tales by Hans Christian Andersen with 1,044 pages
best fiction: The Neverending Story by Michael Ende and The story of a humble Christian by Ignazio Silone
best non-fiction: A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle
Books mentioned in this topic
The Neverending Story (other topics)The Complete Fairy Tales (other topics)
A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose (other topics)
The story of a humble Christian (other topics)
The story of a humble Christian (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ignazio Silone (other topics)Hans Christian Andersen (other topics)
Michael Ende (other topics)
Eckhart Tolle (other topics)
Ignazio Silone (other topics)
More...