U3A Veronika Decides To Die
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U3A Veronika Decides To Die
However I am half way through Paul Coelo's book and he has disappeared under an imaginative view of what is reality from other people's points of view.
And I find myself in another mental asylum! After reading Fingersmith I didn't want to go there for a while but this is a beguiling investigation into normalcy. Or into what a tenuous hold we all have on what we call normal.
I hated Veronika on page 1. I thought she was a wimp. But the story of her confrontation with her own mortality is aligned with her realisation that there are other ways of viewing the world, just as valid as hers and what is more some of them work!
I am still waiting for the author to re-emerge. As he is supposedly a writer of computer games - another view of an organised world - I forsee him returning in some guise.
How are others taking to the reading?
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So.......... after not enjoying his writing style I thought I had better read his most famous book, The Alchemist, however the Latrobe Valley libraries do not have a copy, and they are getting one in from a distant library for me. Hopefully it will come in, in time for me to read it before our next meeting.

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And I prefer judging a book by its content, not by what its author did during his life.
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I think it was Samuel Johnson who said that " the knowledge that he is to be hanged in three days concentrates a man's mind wonderfully."
In this case though it isn't the mind that Veronika is working with; it is her soul. I like the way Coelo has taken little sliding glances at this issue and the sum total is to give us a picture of a girl struggling to find her own answers to what a good life should be. The picture at the end of the difference between a cistern and a flowing river is an apt description of what she is trying to gain - a life outside of the boundaries she has so boringly set for herself.
I do feel let down by the ending, however. To find that it has been a controlled experiment by Dr Igor brings back the rational control which the book's framework has been fighting against.
Perhaps he is saying that all the fighting for freedom is a cynical ploy, and that we have to be rational creatures to be human. I don't like that!
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When the story commences Veronika seems completely turned in upon herself. In Christian theology Martin Luther suggested that's a good definition of sin - being closed off to God and to the needs of others.
In the story, I see Veronika opening up to her deeper self, to other people and to new possibilites.
Mari's comments on page 150 are gems e.g "Where is my soul that I might play the music of my own life with enthusiasm?" Some great thoughts on this page!
Coehelo provide some sueful insights into life.
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