unbearable lightness of being

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unbearable lightness of being

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1perlle
jul. 3, 2007, 8:13 am

I recently finished Kundera's book and found it incredibly distracting when the author would insert himself in the text. I know authors do this from time to time, but it almost always irritates me. Did anyone else have a similar experience while reading this book?

2mrsradcliffe
jul. 19, 2007, 10:02 am

I couldn't finish this book. It was just so abstract.

3perlle
jul. 31, 2007, 8:44 am

It was kind of self-conscious feeling to me. Like it was being abstract for abstract's sake. I'm sure that's completely unhip of me to think that, but it just seemed like the author was trying so hard to be philosophical instead of just writing a book that happened to be a bit philosophical. Does that make any sense?

4Cariola
ag. 1, 2007, 8:14 pm

It made a great movie, however.

5jaeminuf
oct. 29, 2007, 7:34 am

I think that his insertion was very intentional so that you couldn't "lose" yourself in the story. I regarded it as a kind of a Brechtian move, just not as abrasive/hostile.

6Godsdelight Primer missatge
nov. 3, 2007, 10:28 pm

I never read the book, but we did watch the movie in a philosophy class when I was in college. Too weird. I couldn't get into it, which didn't help me want to read the book *LOL* I thought Hitchhiker's Guide was bizarre... but I think ULoB topped it.

7media1001
nov. 4, 2007, 12:46 pm

You want to read a bizarre book, try The Naked Lunch or The Atrocity Exhibition.

-- M1001