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Betty
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Aug 29, 2011 09:39AM

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I'm signing off to do my reading for a few days.

"Imagine there's no country
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion, too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace" -- John Lennon

"Really, the question of cultural nationality never troubled Camus, he was always a humanist and universalist."Camus, 1913-1960, died two years before Algeria became an independent country.
p14 Destiny http://books.google.com/books?id=ScHH...
"I am French by birth, and since 1940, by deliberate choice."
p15 Destiny
"From 1848 until independence, the whole Mediterranean region of Algeria was administered as an integral part of France...The vast arid interior of Algeria...was never considered part of France. "
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_A...
"His origin in Algeria and his experiences there in the thirties were dominating influences in his thought and work."
http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prize...

I disagree w/ Camus as Algerian
Barry, I think Camus was born and raised in Fr..."
Chelsea, thank you for the lead that Camus "was born and raised in French Algeria". Some people say he's French, others French Algerian. I'm guessing that they claim him because of his experiences in French Algeria found in his literature and his journalism advocated Algeria's independence, which did happen in 1962; it separated from France, developing along its own path.
Going back to about 1938, Camus left French Algeria at about 25 yrs of age to join the resistance movement in France. As I noted in the message above, Camus' family were European settlers in French Algeria. If they settled on the Mediterranean coast that was French, but the Algerian interior was less so.

Camus being thought of as Algerian is absurd!"
Barry, Chelsea pointed out that he could possibly be considered French Algerian. Readers will have their favorite or reasonable places for him--France, French Algeria, or Algeria. It sounds like we're not universally agreed about it, nor should we be. Possibly, he considered himself French in his early life, then identified himself with the cause of Algerian independence in later life.

No thank you Barry for moving my list into off-topic nonsense. :( At least it'll be easy to find my list."
You're welcome, Ally. There's at least two sides to every question.



Then, there's Vargas Llosa's Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, a humorous, semi-autobiographical novel about a young man's courtship of his Uncle Lucho's wife's sister and his work at Lima's radio stations in the heyday of dramatized serials.



Well, don't you have a gf now? We can read it thru Skype maybe. I was reading the reviews and it made me laugh too much. I have the impression now that it's more about obsession than eroticism. That sounds good, I guess.


I gave up on that PIECE OF SHIT! Read my review if you want details. Does anyone have any other Irish recommendations? I'm going to avoid Emma D. in the future. Ew, yuck, gross, missing articles, poorly written trash, gimme a break! Maybe I should boycott Ireland forever, and I would if it weren't for Frank McCourt!!!! Angela's Ashes, FTW!



James Joyce is dull to me.

I recently listened to the audio book of Skippy Dies, but I might have actually liked it because of the accents.

I started on a Canadian book: Alice Munro's Too Much Happiness. I was happy to find something that was more than halfway intelligent.
Books mentioned in this topic
Métaphysique des tubes (other topics)The Character of Rain (other topics)
The Green House (other topics)
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (other topics)
The Book Thief (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mario Vargas Llosa (other topics)Marguerite Duras (other topics)