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graceroxas

graceroxas

  • Batangas, Philippines
  • member since September 10 2007

Reviews

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  • The Ghost Road
    • Rated 3 stars

    This reminds me of Catch-22 up to a certain level, but the older novel is much more lucid. The protagonists are somewhat more developed, thanks in large doses to the extensive references to unconventional bedroom habits and making war psyche as one of the important pegs, if not THE peg, of the novel.

    graceroxas wrote this review Saturday, March 8 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Church of Dead Girls
    • Rated 4 stars

    A small town's descent into mob mania and the unfurling of a xenophobia always latent in closed societies and both barely disguised as civic-spiritedness are used to good effect as an element of chill in this suspense novel.
    I was however expecting a more inventive final revelation. It didn't really live up to expectations of psychological complexity that the novel was priming us for.

    graceroxas wrote this review Tuesday, December 25 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Story of O
    • Rated 4 stars

    There's a ferocious integrity about this book that leaves the heroine curiously untainted despite the low toils of the flesh that she willingly subjected herself to.

    It maybe that force of her will that is the ultimate statement here. It is a display of willfulness that is patently female (within the context of society's normal gender role-playing) --- subverting by subservience. I'm recalling a scene here where even her oppressors were taken aback by the depths of degradation she was willing to plumb.

    Im treading blasphemous territories here, but there are probably a lot of inspirational (and sanitized) tales of Christian saintliness around that follows the internal trajectory of Ms. Reage's erotic tale. One can even say that the ends wound up similar though the means are diametrically opposed -- the body finally is mortified to the point of O (zero).

    The author may be talking about episodes usually found in pornographica, but her language has a reverence to it that almost seems to self-consciously tamp down the suggestiveness of the images evoked.

    O also stands for open ends. This book seems to float in a vacuum, with even the authorship not established (Pauline Reage is yet to step forward and reveal she/he is no less fictitious as her characters) and motivations not clear. And the only peg to time and place is the occasional unconvincing reference to O's day job as a fashion photographer.

    Perhaps that is just as well, for a reader has to be able to inhabit O's world unconditionally to find that place where that "savage wind," referred to in the book's introduction, blows through with equal force through the mind, and most especially the heart, of both heroine and reader.

    graceroxas wrote this review Monday, December 10 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • A Canticle for Leibowitz
    • Rated 5 stars

    80-85 percent into this book, I began to feel that no one can stand writing it and then living with an ending --- that the book is crashing towards with an inevitable logic by then --- without holding a certain compromised view of life in general.

    So I did a little spadework on the author, Walter M. Miller, and little wonder, he did a euthanasia on himself after years of spiritual coma.

    It invites comparison with another classic that problematized the war-mongering during and in the immediate aftermath of WWII, the vastly more popular Catch-22. There's that same satirical tone, though of vastly different magnitudes, the same character-driven undertones of despair, and foregone assumptions about demi-gods with clay feet and putty brains running the world's affairs.

    But I find "Canticle..." richer in imagination, plot-wise. In talking about a new Dark Age of Man, one's tendency is to ask 'why not' rather than brace for a suspension of belief, even if the notion seems so farfetched now in this technology-driven age.

    graceroxas wrote this review Monday, December 10 2007. ( reply | view 4 replies | permalink )
  • Smilla's Sense of Snow
    • Rated 4 stars

    My isolated remark about a blatantly racist paragraph in this book doesn't do justice to its full merit. Taken as a whole, it can actually be a kind of indictment against bigots and not just in the racial sense, although I only have a very dim idea of what sort of aborigines the Greenlanders are.

    graceroxas wrote this review Tuesday, November 20 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Deception on His Mind
    • Rated 3 stars

    One of the great aims of literature right now is to avoid racist endings, happy or otherwise. But Sgt. Havers is totally believable. Her guilt trips apropos to the DCI's spartan personal habits are just so hilarious and human.

    graceroxas wrote this review Tuesday, November 20 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • One True Thing: A Novel
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 4 stars

    I have a general distaste for stories about sick people (unless the malady is somehow psychological, in which case 99.9 % of the truly interesting characters in all literature will qualify). But this one spoke to me..mirrored me.. and sent some not very subtle messages.

    Another instance of the book finding me instead of me finding the book.

    graceroxas wrote this review Tuesday, November 20 2007. ( reply | permalink )

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