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joeytitmouse 's review for:
The Waves
by Virginia Woolf
"There is only dialogue," said Taro, "but that's fine. You get completely within each character's head. It's not dialogue, it's internal monologue, stream of consciousness like I witnessed in [b:Orlando|18839|Orlando|Virginia Woolf|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1327948609s/18839.jpg|6057225]. I would like to thank Mrs. Woolf for the investigation of psyche that The Waves gives. The sense of time, my goodness the sense of time is crippled. And I don't know much about the physical features of each character - we are introduced to them from inside. Louis has an Australian accent, though, his father is a banker in Brisbane.
"Now that does not detract from anything. In fact near the end I couldn't really tell if there were supposed to be six characters, or really only one, the author's voice in that world. I wish I could really write my review as poetically as Mrs. Woolf, but I'm not that good. It has such a lyrical quality, it is clearly extraordinary, poetry-in-prose style."
And the 'chapter' separations, I never really thought about life as methaphored in a day, but she does it wonderfully. I guess it's only the late morning for me. Better wake up and go outside, or the day is wasted.
Tuesday follows Monday, Wednesday, Tuesday.
"Now that does not detract from anything. In fact near the end I couldn't really tell if there were supposed to be six characters, or really only one, the author's voice in that world. I wish I could really write my review as poetically as Mrs. Woolf, but I'm not that good. It has such a lyrical quality, it is clearly extraordinary, poetry-in-prose style."
And the 'chapter' separations, I never really thought about life as methaphored in a day, but she does it wonderfully. I guess it's only the late morning for me. Better wake up and go outside, or the day is wasted.
Tuesday follows Monday, Wednesday, Tuesday.