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Cargando... The Violin Diary (2008)por Eric M. Norcross
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I've read this three times since October 2008 (I'm writing this in December of 08.) Here are my basic comments: What Norcross has done here took a lot of courage. More importantly, what he has achieved here will (eventually) earn him the right to call himself a successful author (but not while he publishes on LuLu.) I've read all three of his "materials" from "The Balance of the Seventh Column", which was a conspiracy driven chain of clues with witty remarks on the current state of society, to "Paradigm Shift" which was awkward but thought-provoking - as entertaining as those pieces were, neither stuck with me as much as "The Violin Diary." "The Violin Diary" is Norcross' third completed venture into literature and three times is certainly a charm. I don't feel I need to tell you what it's about, as the previous posters have done a good job at that - but what I can say is that Norcross gets personal, humorous, tragic and ultimately witty in this compilation of memories that make up this infamous story. If you know nothing about this book, let your first bit of knowledge be this: It is as personal as it gets and if that makes you uncomfortable, then perhaps its not for you. If that intrigues you, pick it up as soon as possible and dive right into it. I cannot stress this enough. I'll be the first to say it - I can't STAND romance novels. "The Violin Diary" is, in fact, a romance novel. But I enjoyed it! The fact of the matter is this: I had never read one of Norcross' books, I only knew of him because I wrote an essay on one of his early art films "Sixteen Stories." When I discovered he had been writing, I stumbled across his storefront here on Lulu and while all the titles were of interest, the cover of the heart shaped cluster of islands seemed to hypnotize me into checking it out. I'm glad I did. Norcross so obviously wrote this as a memoir and changed a few names for what I assume are legal purposes. But it's apparent that the author wrote about his own experiences and its real life experiences that move humanity higher above its origins and Norcross has done that with "The Violin Diary" - he has moved humanity to a higher playing field. Not even a scholar from a prestigious university could top this work of literature. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
The Violin Diary relates two love affairs - one with a woman, one with New York. Both seem to mirror the author's perception of The City, that "Life in New York always seemed to be moving back and forth, up and down - up and down, back and forth like violin notes; notes that are impressively changing and always dramatic."Perhaps what is most memorable about this story are the thoughts Norcross poses and then ponders. And there are myriad statements that gave me pause when I read them; some because they are concise gems, others because they document simple gestures that hint of epic proportion when I tilted my perception ever so slightly.While The Violin Diary, on the surface, is a compilation of memories, it is really about one's heart: where it starts, where it ends, and everything in between. It's the journey - the everything in between - that matters most because it is what truly defines us. -- SPB No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Eric writes about a young man named Ezzie, whom I assume isn't too dissimilar from the author himself. He's a New York Transplant, a filmmaker and in the first chapter of the story manages to find himself falling head over heels for a girl he had just met! This book is most girls' fantasies come true, except it becomes a nightmare for Ezzie when the woman of his dreams decides to move to Europe.
I can't say much more as I don't want to spoil it. Most romance novels are from the woman's point-of-view, this one is from the guy's and that's what makes it stand out. What makes it special: honesty. That's the truth. You'd be a fool to pass it up. ( )