Magical Boy
REAL
maccreadysbaby has officially made a sideblog and ain’t NONE of yall gonna find it
i’m too lost in the sauce
attempting to read The Scarlet Letter, why is the introduction/foreword/WHATEVER 30 something pages
still salty about the eye of eden
i’ve come to the realization that, there is in fact, kung fu panda fanfiction
feeling like absolute doodoo water
just had a dream where i was getting married to this random guy and we were driving on this bridge and our car had a WATER DISPENSER?? and he was trying to get some water into his cup but the water dispenser works weird so then the car started flooding and i tried to clean it up and he tried to clean it up too which made the car jerk and we argued abt him focusing on the road.
then we drove to this outside restaurant?? and the food was being eaten on banana leaves?? with a humongous mountain of puto?? (rice cake) and my family was there?? and my grandma gave me a wedding gift?? and then i remember my cousin trying to talk to me and i was mute for some reason so i tried communicating to her with sign language??
currently reading Dumb Witness by Agatha Christie! here are my current thoughts in a nutshell:
it’s kind of giving conservative grandma??
like, yeah, this was written in the 30s; pretty self explanatory.
i really like christie’s storytelling, i do. it’s just this book feels like her shading on the younger generation for,, idk, not being traditional or something?? which really does feel like something every younger generation faces (times really don’t change)
for the last 12 chapters i read, im just being constantly reminded about how emily arundell’s niece married a Greek doctor and how dreadful it is. like my bad, sorry this dude isn’t ENGLISH ENOUGH FOR YOU?? yall are just jealous they got good food okay
and let’s not forget there’s a slur in the book💀
literal jumpscare when i opened the table of contents.
but then again, just looking at my older copy of And Then There Were None makes me wonder why i’m surprised
UPDATE: Just finished the book! i’m surprised i got through it that quickly. anyways, here are my thoughts!
i thought the plot was interesting. i thought it was pretty cool how upfront everyone was abt how they wanted emily’s money since it shows that none of them can be completely trusted.
like everyone was after the same thing, for different reasons, but only ONE of them actually committed to it.
and let’s not forget the constant reminder of good old “english-breeding.” it’s not said a lot, but it’s something i notice popping up in the book from time to time.
like goodness gracious woman, please stop. describing others as “well bred” makes them sound like a horse freshly groomed
anyways, i think this is the first time i got introduced to hastings? i didn’t even know he was a reoccurring character and a friend of poirot since i’ve only read Murder on the Orient Express and And Then There Were None.
so you can imagine my confusion when i skimmed through random pages and noticed it was from someone else’s perspective.
but their dynamic is pretty cool! i kind of see it as like poirot doing his usual detective stuff and it going like:
poirot, lying to get some answers:
hastings: you are crazy, y’know that?
poirot: not crazy enough to kill, though!
well that’s how i see it anyways. i do think it’s cool that seeing through the lens of hastings does make things more fun. like this silly guy is as clueless as me
and he kind of vocalizes the audience? kind of? that’s how i saw it during the times he tried convincing poirot that the ball incident was genuine
but yeah it was okay. i might read the first book of the series because i just found out poirot is a refugee or smth?? like i need to know what’s up with that
so yeah, that’s my thoughts!
just started to read no longer human by osamu dazai. so far, it’s pretty interesting! i’m maybe halfway? through the second notebook
when i was reading the back, the summary mentioned how it was one of dazai’s last complete works and that just suddenly reminded me of a vid i saw of someone basically describing the book as his suicide letter, and i can see why
i don’t know too much about his life. it’s just a bit sad to think that this book was him laying himself bare under the guise of yozo, as if to finally tell people,”this is how it really feels”
that sense of feeling alienated from everybody is personal, and it feels strange to read it out on paper after going on for so long not knowing how to articulate it
the perspective of yozo does have his faults, i know that he’s an unreliable narrator, he does some fucked up things, and his opinions definitely were a product of its time. i just think it shows just how human he really was; he’s flawed.
like when he describes how he didn’t feel like he was loved while growing up, just taken care of. for me that really just illustrates how detached he was, his isolation clouded his judgement. because while yes the people in his life may have just taken care of him and nothing else, there’s also the probability that they really did love him
the writing style is beautiful. i’m not really sure where this will go. i know this is kind of a lot for only the first two sections i just think too much lol
☆ just a bundle of nervous energy ☆ call me Vela! ☆ 16 years old ☆ we do messy book rants, brain dumps, and all kinds of dumbassery
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