
Title | : | A. V. Laider |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1407644246 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781407644240 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 48 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 1920 |
A. V. Laider Reviews
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An excellent short story that held my interest through to the end. It takes a lovely twist and has a slightly ironic ending--which is always pleasing in a short work.
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Сюжет немного мета, но стиль автора просто превосходный.
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This short story is largely an exercise in conversational wit while embedding a deeper question about the basic human curiosity. The curiosity of the first-person "I" in this story is the one to be examined carefully since it defies the self-proclaimed disbelief. How does one "be taken" by stories told in a particular fashion? How does the disbelief giving ways to fascination and mystery? The author has demonstrated the art of story-telling pitting successfully against our cooler reasoning -- it is the atmosphere, the foreshadowing, the details, and the way an outright impossiblity woven into our psyche. This story is a purely jewel in short-story form.
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There is always a slight shock in seeing an envelope of one's own after it has gone through the post. It looks as if it had gone through so much.
This is the second short story by Max Beerbohm I've recently read — both were titled with a man's name; the other was
Enoch Soames: A Memory of the Eighteen-Nineties.
This one contains a real fantasy, if you will, in that the title character is a fabulist, a spinner of tales — in other words, an unreliable narrator. The plot depends on a series of remarkable coincidences.
The undisclosed first person narrator of the story is as frustrated by the antics of A.V. Laider as the reader might be. -
Amazing by all means. The narrator goes to a motel to complete his recovery after catching influenza and runs into Laider and they speculate on existential questions on free will and the truth. Laider narrates two stories that conflate reality with imagination, and by the end the reader is muddled up, not knowing what to believe and what to discard. Very witty twist and a very interesting story to read indeed.
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I did not like it.
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This short story was one of my favorites this semester. It is incredibly imaginative and it plays with your mind. I can't believe that there are other people that create stories this way and share them as if they were true! I just do it in my head.
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A gentle, amusing and mischievous short story. The imagined discussion between the envelopes on the hotel letter board is as humorous as it is ridiculous.
Fun to read. -
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/761 -
Listen to it here:
https://anchor.fm/austin-lugo/episode...
Get early access, exclusive content, and so much more:
https://www.patreon.com/lifethroughfi... -
This story is taken from Seven Men, copyright 1920
I unpacked my things and went down to await luncheon.
Two of Beerbohm's self-portraits. "The Theft" depicts him stealing a book from the library in 1894. "The Restitution" shows him returning that book in 1920. (wiki pic)
absurdist literature
3* -
IN COSTAIN STORIES 2
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One of those unusual short tales, and damned extreme imaginations...