Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
:thumbsup: Let me know what you thought about it when you're done.
:throwup:
I really thought that was a crappy book.
Why is that?
It's big drawback is that it's very dense and difficult to follow, which understandably is more than enough for someone to put the book down. I think the 15 page sermon about Hell is almost entirely alienating to all readers and requires a big leap of faith (no pun intended) to examine in a larger context, which is the only thing that validates it- which can also be said for most of the book and is it's other major flaw.
After letting it settle in a bit, I liked the book. The beginning was good enough biography and enjoyable writing, and the end had a lot of ideas that I really got behind. The middle was not so good, as I said.
I think the book is important because first of all it's good writing, and it's pretty revolutionary technique. The idea of having a book that really only has one character and no real plot, just a person's thoughts and impressions of the mundane was practically anathema to the idea of literature. That's usually what defines non-fiction.
It's also a great insight into the reality of the Irish Catholic experience, so it has a social/cultural and historical value there.
And these things are also blended into the literary character of the book, and all of Joyce's work. With the exception of Shakespeare, Dante is arguable the greatest historical verse writer. Stephen Dedalus, Joyce's alter ego, says "I am the servant of two masters. One in England and one in Rome." He is referring to the British Crown and the Catholic Pope, but it's an interesting literary parallel, isn't it? And
Portrait of the Artist is a parallel of Dante's
Vita Nouva.
For Dante it is about how the relationship to another person introduced him to a greater vision of destiny beyond his own psychological and sensory experience, and reaffirmed his faith in the church. For Joyce he lost his faith in the church because of the hypocrisy and dogma and felt alienated from the people around him for almost all of his life, and he found that experience of enlightenment through art. I don't know about you, but that had a lot of personal resonance for me and I think that speaks to a lot of how people feel and is the best thing about the book.