- the words ironical and unnatural appear frequently - is there a message in this?
- Regarding the film, every scene was gilded
- One reader "much preferred Middlemarch, because Middlemarch had better women characters"
- "I felt compelled to read the novel"
- "This was a better book than War and Peace, although I feel a stronger connection to War and Peace. Anna Karenina is so much deeper; Tolstoy is a better writer here."
- "I could have done without the chapters on Kitty's lying-in and the hunting expeditions, and the club. Did those scenes illuminate the characters?" One reader responded that those scenes, particularly the club, showed the kind of social and family life from which Anna is now excluded.
- Many readers loved the scene when Levin asked Vasenka to leave his house for flirting with Kitty.
- Oblonsky is a funny creature, especially when he is with Karenin and Lydia and the fainting Frenchman and has no idea what is going on.
- Anna is a cautionary tale about being alone.
- "It wasn't clear to me that Anna's state was due to external reality, but more from opium."
- The meeting between Levin and Anna is beautifully written.
- The portrait of Anna is representative of the difference between appearance and reality.
- Her suicide is a way of getting power back.
- The chapter of Varenka and Sergey in their almost-but-not-quite coming together, was excellent. In the words unsaid and the missed opportunity, do we have a reference to the possibility of Anna and Vronsky not connecting?
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
More Thoughts from Our Final Round of Discussions
Just a few more notes from last week's Anna Karenina roundup:
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