(Kartonnen dozen) PDF DOWNLOAD Ø Tom Lanoye
Read ☆ eBook, PDF or Kindle ePUB ↠ Tom Lanoye
Summary Kartonnen dozen characters Kartonnen dozen ↠ eBook, PDF or Kindle ePUB Tom Lanoye ↠ 7 Read In Kartonnen dozen legt Tom Lanoye enerzijds de verslavingen en de valstrikken bloot van de grote allesverterende jeugdliefde die iedereen kent uit ervaring Anderzijds schildert hij zij. This book was unlike any book I d read before It wasn t a children s story or a young adult novel It wasn t a story with an obvious plot and with a character getting from place A to place B It felt like i wasn t actually reading a story like I was getting to know a person s pastI really liked the way Lanoye can create an image and set a mood He can describe a situation in such detail using various metaphors that it feels like you are in fact present there He can make you nostalgic for memories that aren t even yours At least that s what i felt when he described various occurrences from his childhood The book was definitely enlightening too in a way I surely have learnt a lot about the wonders of male masturbation Maybe a bit TOO much At times it felt like jerking off was his only purpose in life But in general i liked the book a lot and enjoyed reading it
Summary Kartonnen dozen

Summary Kartonnen dozen characters Kartonnen dozen ↠ eBook, PDF or Kindle ePUB Tom Lanoye ↠ 7 Read It de bejaarde priesterdichter die een inspirerend leraar Nederlands blijkt te zijn de turners waaraan de jonge auteur zich vergaapt en de stripverhalen waaraan hij zijn ogen kapot lees. I m not sure what to think of this book It was an autobiography which I didn t realise when I first choose it and which I didn t really enjoy There were parts that I enjoyed but overall I think the book was a bit too explicit for me and the decriptions were often too long
Read ☆ eBook, PDF or Kindle ePUB ↠ Tom LanoyeSummary Kartonnen dozen characters Kartonnen dozen ↠ eBook, PDF or Kindle ePUB Tom Lanoye ↠ 7 Read N eigen afkomst en opvoeding de slagerswinkel van zijn vader de vier vrouwen die hem hebben opgevoed de katholieke school die probeert overeind te blijven in de stormen van de modernite. What is this book about is perhaps not the right uestion to ask Like in the other two instalments of the Wase trilogie the first a collection of short stories this one a novel of sorts the third a memoir the events are based on Lanoye s childhood the protagonist is his little self In Kartonnen dozen Lanoye tells a homosexual love story in the Flanders of the second half of the twentieth century or rather he tells the story of childhood infatuation No self victimizing in terms of gay hating priests and the conflicts of being attracted to a boy It all seems to come uite naturally and of course fantasies mostly take place in his head mostly On the way we learn all about the women in Lanoye s life and are given bites of modern and medieval history of Flanders Belgium Europe with chunky grandiose statements about the macro level dynamics of history mixed in Can these last two things also be said of the other two instalments Yes Does this make the book redundant Sometimes in part but it is absolutely worth itPerhaps the story of a near decade long obsession is the perfect home for Lanoye s voice His voice is burlesue mixes informal Flemish with century old book Dutch with some French la flamande splashes adjectives and coordinate phrases liberally As he defends for pages on end in Speechless he is a follower of the maxim Less is less Descriptions of what suitcases kids could use to go on the free holidays organized by the Christian Health Fund can segway into the history of the Flemish emancipation movement and he permits himself to take a detour from the plot after the first couple of pages that lasts for about a fifth of the bookTom Lanoye describes his adventures in masturbation and in the conuering of the body of his classmate He talks of endless obsessive staring at calves and backs and butt cheeks And in all of this what I am left with is an impression of what it looks like to start loving the world Desire is staged in its earliest purest most unsettling form making little Tom feel disgust and attraction in polar opposites look around his with wide open eyes feel simultaneously puny and so desperate he simply has to give life his allFrom time to time Lanoye s love of language perhaps specifically his love of his own writing makes the whole thing a little too much too much speaking directly to the reader too much trite philosophizing Sadly the somewhat banal ending can be counted among these occasional infelicities But the out loud laughs these are usually sandwiched in make you soon forget And there s no need to forgive if you re falling in love More please