Andrew Schoneweis từ Nasino SV, Italy

andrew_schoneweis

05/16/2024

Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách

Andrew Schoneweis Sách lại (11)

2019-08-19 22:30

Tự Học Flash Và Dreamweaver Trong 10 Tiếng Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: KS. Trương Công Thọ

Francisco Sionil Jose (born 1942) is the Philippines' bet for Nobel Prize for Literature. He is one of the widely known Filipino novelists using English. His contemporaries are now either dead or have stopped writing so their books are no longer sold at the mainstream bookstores in the country. However, the books of F. Sionil Jose still sell like hotcakes occupying the eye-level shelves and competing for space with those books of the much younger novelists. Dusk (or "Po-on" whenever published in the Philippines) is the first book of F. Sionil Jose's The Rosales Saga. There are 5 books in the series but F. Sionil Jose says that each of the book can be read independently. They are all set mainly in Rosales, a town in Pangasinan, where F. Sionil was born and where he also grew up. The series is said to be an allegory for the Filipinos in search of their true identity. Dusk tells the life of Eustaquio "Istak" Salvador or simply Istak Samson (he changes his surname when he and his family go to hiding) who works in the parish run by a Spanish friar during the late nineteenth century in Northern Philippines. The friar is good to young Istak and takes care of him like his own son: he teaches him how to pray, heal sickness, write and speak Spanish and Latin and how to assist during the Holy Mass. The friar goes old and so he thinks that Istak should be sent to Laoag seminary to become a priest. However, this is during the Spanish occupation and indios (that's how Spaniards call Filipinos during that time) are not allowed to become priests so Istak, now 21 y/o, has to go back to his family and help in his family's farm. Istak's father begs the new priest to send his son to the seminary and while they are arguing, Istak's father kills the priest. The story continues with the whole family escaping like fugitives and afraid of encountering mga tulisan (local terrorists), Spanish armies or even American soldiers (since at the later part of the story, Spain ceded Philippines to American by the virtue of 1989 Treaty of Paris). The exodus of the family reminded me of John Steinbeck's Joad family in his opus The Grapes of Wrath because of the death, sickness and danger that lurked during the whole journey. The local setting with the people believing in spirits, superstitions mixed with Catholic practices reminds me of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Days of Solitude (Book 1 itself covers 20-30 years). They say that the series has its epic grandeur that one will feel after finishing all the 5 books that can remind one of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace. At least for the first book, the prose is lucid and tells the story straight from his heart (he is a Filipino who comes from that part of the country). J. Sionil Jose's effort in researching the details covered in this book is astounding. The opening letter seems authentic and the language used throughout the novel is consistent and amusing. My favorite part are the appearances of the two well-known and beloved figures in Philippine history. I will not tell you who are they as I have a feeling that F. Sionil Jose used them as a come-on for this first book (btw, my brother has told me that this is the only book worth reading in the series). Imagine those two characters talking and moving in your imagination while reading the book. At least for one of them, I have not seen a movie about his life and even a footage of his pictures on TV. I used to see him only on a peso bill (I forgot on what denomination). Fantastic book.

2019-08-19 23:30

Bồi Dưỡng Nhân Cách Cho Trẻ - Tớ Thật Đặc Biệt Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi:

This is dark, passionate, bloody and creepy - and I really enjoyed it. Silla discovered her parents dead in a pool of their own blood, her mother apparently murdered by her father, who then killed himself. This has left deep scars on her psyche, and it continues to play on her mind through the novel. As you can imagine, this is a pretty bloody start to the story, and the blood continues to flow right until the end as all magic requires a blood sacrifice. This might be the most bloody book I have ever read, and it did disturb me a little bit. I love tales of magic, but I never found myself wishing I could do this magic, as I have with Hogwarts magic in the past. It isn't aspirational, this magic is just a little bit sick... there were too many mentions of cutting, blood smearing and dead carcasses for it to be anything other than dark and gritty. The story is told through split perspectives... there's Silla and also Nick, the new boy in town with a faint recollection of a disturbing childhood exposure to magic. So when he stumbles across Silla experimenting with her father's old notebook in the nearby cemetery one evening, he is drawn right in. The relationship between Silla and Nick develops into a very hot teen romance very quickly, but it is written well and is believable. There's plenty of kissing, yearning and so on! There is also a third narrative voice which is delivered through excerpts of an old diary. Initially this meant the story was a little slow to get going, but I loved how the diary excerpts moved through to the present day and illuminated the current goings on more and more... it really built the pace up until I couldn't put this book down. I also enjoyed how the POVs from Nick and Silla frequently picked up immediately from one to the other seamlessly within a scene; this also helped the flow of the book. The one thing that I found myself not enjoying so much was all Silla's talk of the masks she made herself wear to cope with the world. I understand the idea, but it frequently jarred me out of the text to try and visualize the particular mask. It wasn't necessary and I could have done without it really. I did like the tiny nod to Maggie Stiefvater in there though. That was a lovely touch. I really can't give this five stars, even though I read it very quickly. It is very well written - the plot is intricate and surprising - but I just can't *love* something so bloody. I wouldn't let anyone under 14 near this.

Người đọc Andrew Schoneweis từ Nasino SV, Italy

Người dùng coi những cuốn sách này là thú vị nhất trong năm 2017-2018, ban biên tập của cổng thông tin "Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn" khuyến cáo rằng tất cả các độc giả sẽ làm quen với văn học này.