Leslie's Updates en-US Thu, 01 May 2025 14:41:41 -0700 60 Leslie's Updates 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg ReadStatus9375567183 Thu, 01 May 2025 14:41:41 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie wants to read 'Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams']]> /review/show/7534961320 Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams by Philip K. Dick Leslie wants to read Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams by Philip K. Dick
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ReadStatus9375555376 Thu, 01 May 2025 14:38:23 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie wants to read 'Friday Black']]> /review/show/7534953073 Friday Black by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah Leslie wants to read Friday Black by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
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Rating853116716 Thu, 01 May 2025 11:54:54 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie Aguilera liked a userstatus]]> / Iris ☾ (dreamer.reads)
Iris � (dreamer.reads) is on page 178 of 213 of El Aleph
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UserStatus1055488355 Thu, 01 May 2025 11:53:35 -0700 <![CDATA[ Leslie is 50% done with Bluets ]]> Bluets by Maggie Nelson Leslie is 50% done with <a href="/book/show/6798263-bluets">Bluets</a>. ]]> ReadStatus9371738560 Wed, 30 Apr 2025 16:41:34 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie wants to read 'The Lottery and Other Stories']]> /review/show/7532205191 The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson Leslie wants to read The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson
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ReadStatus9371735351 Wed, 30 Apr 2025 16:40:26 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie wants to read 'Exhalation']]> /review/show/7532202949 Exhalation by Ted Chiang Leslie wants to read Exhalation by Ted Chiang
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ReadStatus9370694012 Wed, 30 Apr 2025 11:13:56 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie wants to read 'Bart Simpson Class Clown']]> /review/show/7531491664 Bart Simpson Class Clown by Matt Groening Leslie wants to read Bart Simpson Class Clown by Matt Groening
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ReadStatus9367238111 Tue, 29 Apr 2025 12:42:01 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie started reading 'Lo que sabe la señorita Kim']]> /review/show/7229616020 Lo que sabe la señorita Kim by Cho Nam-Joo Leslie started reading Lo que sabe la señorita Kim by Cho Nam-Joo
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Rating852202533 Mon, 28 Apr 2025 19:54:20 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie Aguilera liked a userstatus]]> / Estefy Park
Estefy Park is on page 350 of 480 of El faro de los amores dormidos
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Rating851852627 Sun, 27 Apr 2025 20:04:50 -0700 <![CDATA[Leslie Aguilera liked a review]]> /
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
"A Clockwork Orange is one of those books which everyone has heard of but which few people have actually read �- mostly, I think, because it is preceded by a reputation of shocking ultra-violence. I’m not going to deny here that the book contains violence. It features lengthy descriptions of heinous crimes, and they’re vivid descriptions, full of excitement. (Burgess later wrote in his autobiography: ‘I was sickened by my own excitement at setting it down.�) Yet it does not glorify violence, nor is it a book about violence per se. Rather it’s an exploration of the morality of free will. Of whether it is better to choose to be bad than to be conditioned to be good. Of alienation and how to deal with the excesses to which such alienation may lead. And ultimately, of one man’s decision to say goodbye to all that. (At least in the UK version. The American version, on which Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation was based, ends on a less optimistic note.) In short, it’s a novella of ideas which just happens to contain a fair bit of violence.

It is also quite an artistic and linguistic achievement. Those who have seen the film will know that Alex (the anti-hero) and his droogs (friends) speak a made-up language full of Russian loanwords, Shakespearean and Biblical influences and Cockney rhyming slang. Initially this nadsat language was nearly incomprehensible to me, and my first response to it was bad. I found myself cursing Burgess, telling him that it wasn’t fair to put his readers through something like that. (If I want to read an incomprehensible book, I’ll read Finnegans Wake, thank you very much.) However, Burgess takes great care to introduce his new words in an understandable way, so after a few pages I got the hang of the nadsat lingo, and after a few more pages I actually began to enjoy it, because I’m enough of a linguist to go in for that sort of thing. I found myself loving the Russian loanwords, rejoicing when I recognised a German loanword among them and enjoying the Shakespearean quality of Alex� dialogues. I finished the book with an urgent wish to learn Russian and read more Shakespeare. I doubt many readers will respond to the book in that way (not everyone shares my enthusiasm for languages and classical stuff), but my point is: you’ll get used to the lingo, and at some point you’ll begin to admire it, because for one thing, Burgess is awfully consistent about it, and for another, it just sounds so damned good. I mean, if you’re going to come up with a new word for ‘crazy�, you might as well choose bezoomny, right? Because it actually sounds mad. Doesn’t it?

Anyhow, there’s more to A Clockwork Orange than just philosophical ideas and linguistic pyrotechnics. The writing itself is unexpectedly lyrical, and not just when it deals with violence. Some of the most beautiful passages in the book deal with music. More specifically, classical music, because for all his wicked ways, Alex has a passion for classical music. He particularly adores Beethoven, an adoration I happen to share. I came away from the book thinking I might consent to becoming Alex� devotchka (woman, wife) simply because he is capable of getting carried away by Beethoven’s Ninth and hates having it spoilt for him. He’s cultured, is Alex, and while his culturedness obviously does not equal civilisation and goodness (a point he himself is quick to make), it does put him a notch above the average hooligan. It’s the apparent dichotomy between Alex� tastes in art and his taste for violence which makes him such an interesting protagonist and which keeps you following his exploits to their not entirely believable (but good) conclusion.

In short, then, A Clockwork Orange is an excellent book �- a bit challenging at first, but gripping and interesting and full of style and ideas. Not many books can claim as much.
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