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Cargando... The Keypor Benita Kane Jaro
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I understand what Jaro was doing with this book--fleshing out her theory of the trajectory of Catullus' relationships with Clodia and Marcus Caelius Rufus and how they relate to his poetry--but I really did not enjoy reading it. She has some interesting theories on the kinds of people they were and on the origins of some of the poems (e.g. the glubit in the crossroads poem as a final frustration with Clodia's constantly being with other men). But that alone a good book does not make. There is way too much "in the head" reflection, and a lot of it is repeated over and over again--I found myself skimming whole paragraphs and pages because I already knew what it was saying and I just wanted to get to the dialogue that actually moved the story along. There are also no characters to like (including Catullus himself). I guess I am glad I read it for the provocative ideas it will make me think about, but I did not enjoy it and I will not read it again or recommend it to others.
Pertenece a las seriesThe Key (1)
Marcus Caelius Rufus, a young politician, has holed up in a country town in the midst of a bloody and prolonged civil war. Great forces contend for Rome, and Caelius has ties to them all-the charismatic Julius Caesar, his beloved teacher Cicero, the hero Pompey the Great. Which side is he on? He must choose. Now he must reconsider who he is: his childhood and education, his loves and friendships, his complex relationship to Caesar, the man who has come to dominate his life. Before he is done, he will discover the shocking truth about Caesar, about Rome, and about himself. This book is a vivid and exciting read. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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My December 2016 rereading really brought home the artificiality and purpleness of the prose, which really had impressed me the first time, but is annoying this time. This is one of the few times I have downgraded a book.
After the poet's sad life of barely thirty years, his good friend Marcus Caelius Rufus conveys the corpse to its burial. Catullus's father [the Old Man] journeys out from Verona, visits Caelius, and asks, "Explain my son to me" after giving Caelius a box of mementos and writings--poems, notes, letters. The novel jumps back and forth in time [54 BC--in the novel the present] to Caelius's memories through those years, the most important event being Catullus's passionate love affair with Clodia Metelli. As she is a high-born lady and he doesn't want to compromise her reputation, he calls her Lesbia'.
Some of his poetry is inserted into the text, each poem having to do with some incident in the story. We see how Catullus has poured his heart's blood into these poems; 'Lesbia' has played viciously with his emotions; Catullus has swung from euphoria to despair because of this unrequited love.
"Odi et amo. quare id faciam, fortasse requiris?
nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior."
[I hate and I love. Perhaps you ask why I do this?
I do not know, but I feel it happen and I am torn apart.]
Poem #85
In his 'crossroads and alleyways' poem, #58, he admits to himself what a slut she is. Even so...
The author tells us in her Notes its ambiguity is the key --i.e., catalyst, to her conception of the story.
Through the descriptions of Rome -- the mansions on the Hills to the seedy taverns and the Subura to the mystery rites of the goddess Cybele -- I felt myself to be an onlooker of the events. The characters were not saints, by any means; I loathed Clodia, the femme fatale. As one character, an actor named Xanthius, describing Clodia: "Now I know how to play Circe." Catullus was completely obsessed with the woman; we might even call him a "stalker" in our day. Yes, there was sex in this novel owing to the subject, but as it was written a generation ago, I felt it was not as blatant or vulgar as much of today's writings. Also, for that time, although graphic, it was not tasteless.
In my December 2016 rereading I still felt it wasn't tasteless, but it got repetitious and boring. The author should have used such descriptions more sparsely
The last few pages were poignant. I will never again listen to Orff's Catulli Carmina without thinking of this novel. On rereading, I've marked each poem in the novel with the number in Catullus's own poems and am fascinated with how the author worked them into the story, especially as they were out of order. ( )