Reviews tagging 'Animal cruelty'

The Pillow Book by Sei Shōnagon

4 reviews

mondovertigo's review

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funny lighthearted reflective slow-paced

4.75


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lilaceous's review against another edition

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funny lighthearted reflective relaxing slow-paced

3.0

purpose/intention - ⭐️
cohesion of the entries - ⭐️
engaging overall - .5⭐️
would recommend - .5⭐️
would read again -

the drama!!! this journal is interesting and beautiful, but also pretentious and petty. during especially elitist and classist passages i had to remind myself that it was written over a thousand years ago and can still be appreciated as a piece of history.

it was fun to become so familiar with a writer who lived in a completely different world from the one i live in, and to realize that her world is surprisingly less different than i expected.

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kappafrog's review

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emotional funny informative inspiring lighthearted relaxing medium-paced

5.0


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dee_dreams's review against another edition

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lighthearted relaxing slow-paced
Sei Shōnagon’s famous Pillow Book offers a glimpse into a distant, exotic past, where court ladies were so gorgeous they had to shield their beauty from (most) men behind screens and curtains, and spent their days composing poems, and nights by the fire gossiping about the goings-on at court. Who can resist an ancient, never-ending sleepover?

It’s fascinating and colorful – literally. Probably a quarter of the diary consists of Shōnagon describing the plum pinks and spring-shoot greens of the men’s gathered trousers and women’s akomé gowns. There are many lists, some with descriptions so spot-on to this day that you say “Aaaah,” others lost in translation over the centuries yet still somewhat intriguing, and others not. In Shōnagon’s defense, “I set to work on this boundless pile of paper to fill it to the last sheet with all manner of odd things, so no doubt there’s much in these pages that makes no sense.”

Shōnagon was as much an unbearable snob as a witty and observant aesthete, so reading her diary is a bit like calling up a friend and hearing her alternate between complaining about how peasants act and rambling about how wonderful life is. The night I got my Covid vaccine I had a fever dream in which Sei Shōnagon (in the voice of Meredith McKinney’s translation) narrated all the minutiae of the day before, so there’s that.

My favorite entries are when she recounts her flirtations with men, complains about them, argues with them, enthuses about the call of the hototogisu, describes the Empress’ beauty and wit, and when she tries her hand at fiction. It’s also a lovely way to acquaint yourself with the gorgeous poetry of this era. This is a good book to fall asleep to, or to read when you’re on your way somewhere, or to help yourself escape for a little bit in the evening, when work is done.

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