Title | : | Fool's Paradise (Coleman Dowell Finnish Literature) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1564784223 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781564784223 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 144 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 1988 |
Awards | : | Finlandia Prize in Fiction (1988), Valtion kirjallisuuspalkinto (1989) |
Fool's Paradise (Coleman Dowell Finnish Literature) Reviews
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Each page offers a thread. These fleeting links to the core of this woman's tortured soul grow revealing and rather gripping. My sole concern is the brevity; I felt these intriguing characters deserved more, their stories, while polluted, needed some fleshing.
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A testament for the disenfranchized, the marginalized, the other, that is woman.
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I danced all night with a bunch of confused 19 year olds... ended up reading this in the morning, there's no point in sleeping when you can just dream.
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Ch.1
I’ve listened to many stones, but I’ve never heard anything. Stones used to be different. They knew how to talk.
Ch. 2
It puzzles me a little that people who claim to remember their past were so often kings and queens.
Ch. 3
His worst quality is that he’s married.
Ch. 4
Civilized people don’t reveal their feelings even to themselves — they consider these too common.
Ch. 5
Your head clears up when you notice that you’re insane.
Ch. 6
A blue bus stops at the base of the pine tree. On the side of the bus it says, “Here goes a can of Finns(TM).”
Ch. 7
There are people who prefer to read beautiful writers, but I’m not choosy when it comes to external appearances.
Ch. 8
There’s a natural explanation for everything, and if there isn’t, someone invents one.
Ch. 9
Life is straightforward.
Ch. 10
When you grow old there’s less and less to wonder about. It doesn’t seem surprising anymore that the moon doesn’t fall from the sky like a pancake, even though stars are falling all the time.
Ch. 11
Five days a week I’m unemployed, but on weekends I have two days off.
Ch. 12
When autumn comes, I always have this desire to leave the country.
Ch 13
For some reason I feel revulsion toward the past.
Ch. 14
When I was young, adults got annoyed with me easily.
Ch. 15
Taste and smell were first in my world. Then came color.
Ch. 16
It often happens that a person appears first in your thoughts and then calls. In Lapland it’s called a false arrival.
Ch. 17
A person has the right to choose what she does. I’d rather become a tube of toothpaste than a civil servant.
Ch. 18
My heart is knotted up and things fall out of my hands all day.
Ch. 19
And sometimes lovebirds start to mimic each other, but because they don’t do it with any evil intent, it isn’t witchcraft, just enchantment, and it probably happens everywhere in the world.
Ch. 20
Then she went to school and learned to lie and disguise her feelings. You had to learn those skills if you wanted to succeed and live long in the world.
Ch. 21
The world has been saved again.
Ch. 22
Today is like a heavy train car that I have to start moving with nothing but brute force.
Ch. 23.
Since then, I’ve thought of suicide as a practical activity, and practicality isn’t for me.
Ch. 24
I’ll never forget his affection; he brooded over me like an egg and was shocked when a creature emerged from the egg that had legs and wanted to flee his love.
Ch. 25
Someone slams a car door shut in the yard. I looked to see if it was Santa Claus, but it wasn’t.
Ch. 26
I like everything that can be touched with the hand, heard with the ear, seen with the eye, and tasted with the tongue.
Ch. 27
Luckily the invisible person doesn’t speak; otherwise I’d think I was going insane.
Ch. 28
He said that it’s a small paper; there are only six million readers.
Ch. 29
She doesn’t dare talk to me because I’m old and experienced. I have half a lifetime of horrors behind me; for her they’re still ahead.
Ch. 30
I fell from heaven to hell; people live here too, but I’m suffocating with longing, and it isn’t any vague longing.
Ch. 31
It snows every day.
Ch. 32
I’ve stopped having dreams. I’ve lost hope. It’s easier to live without it; the longing seems less oppressive. -
Some of the dream sequences are really neat