l's Reviews > Youth
Youth
by
"She writes every week but he does not write every week in return. That would be too much like
reciprocation."
"He has a horror of spilling mere emotion on to the page. Once it has begun to spill out he would not know how to stop it. It would be like severing an artery and watching one's lifeblood gush out."
"They might as well get married, he and Astrid, then spend the rest of their lives looking after each other like invalids."
"He is chagrined to see how well the reality principle operates, how, under the prod of loneliness, the boy with spots settles for the girl with the dull hair and the heavy legs, how everyone, no matter how unlikely, finds, in the end, a partner."
"Without descending into the depths one cannot be an artist. But what exactly are the depths? He had thought that trudging down icy streets, his heart numb with loneliness, was the depths. But perhaps the real depths are different, and come in unexpected form: in a flare-up of nastiness against a girl in the early hours of the morning, for instance. Perhaps the depths that he has wanted to plumb have been within him all the time, closed up in his chest: depths of coldness, callousness, caddishness."
"Sorry: the word comes heavily out of his mouth, like a stone. Does a single word of indeterminate class count as speech? Has what occurred between himself and the old man been an instance of human contact, or is it better described as mere social interaction, like the touching of feelers between ants? To the old man, certainly, it was nothing. All day long the old man stands there with his stacks of papers, muttering angrily to himself; he is always waiting for a chance to abuse some passer-by. Whereas in his own case the memory of that single words will persist for weeks, perhaps for the rest of his life. Bumping into people, saying “Sorry!�, getting abused: a ruse, a cheap way of forcing a conversation. How to trick loneliness."
"What is wrong with him is that he is not prepared to fail."
by

l's review
bookshelves: 2012, biographical, novel-novella, south-african-lit, african-lit
Jan 25, 2012
bookshelves: 2012, biographical, novel-novella, south-african-lit, african-lit
"She writes every week but he does not write every week in return. That would be too much like
reciprocation."
"He has a horror of spilling mere emotion on to the page. Once it has begun to spill out he would not know how to stop it. It would be like severing an artery and watching one's lifeblood gush out."
"They might as well get married, he and Astrid, then spend the rest of their lives looking after each other like invalids."
"He is chagrined to see how well the reality principle operates, how, under the prod of loneliness, the boy with spots settles for the girl with the dull hair and the heavy legs, how everyone, no matter how unlikely, finds, in the end, a partner."
"Without descending into the depths one cannot be an artist. But what exactly are the depths? He had thought that trudging down icy streets, his heart numb with loneliness, was the depths. But perhaps the real depths are different, and come in unexpected form: in a flare-up of nastiness against a girl in the early hours of the morning, for instance. Perhaps the depths that he has wanted to plumb have been within him all the time, closed up in his chest: depths of coldness, callousness, caddishness."
"Sorry: the word comes heavily out of his mouth, like a stone. Does a single word of indeterminate class count as speech? Has what occurred between himself and the old man been an instance of human contact, or is it better described as mere social interaction, like the touching of feelers between ants? To the old man, certainly, it was nothing. All day long the old man stands there with his stacks of papers, muttering angrily to himself; he is always waiting for a chance to abuse some passer-by. Whereas in his own case the memory of that single words will persist for weeks, perhaps for the rest of his life. Bumping into people, saying “Sorry!�, getting abused: a ruse, a cheap way of forcing a conversation. How to trick loneliness."
"What is wrong with him is that he is not prepared to fail."
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Reading Progress
January 25, 2012
–
Started Reading
January 25, 2012
– Shelved
January 25, 2012
– Shelved as:
2012
January 25, 2012
– Shelved as:
biographical
January 25, 2012
– Shelved as:
novel-novella
January 27, 2012
–
Finished Reading
August 26, 2013
– Shelved as:
south-african-lit
June 13, 2014
– Shelved as:
african-lit