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The History of Love

The Geography of Love I’ll admit to the fact the seminar was not a complete waste of time, and I’ll admit the book is a bit interesting. I mean giving the slow start it has and the pretty confusing narrating. The History of Love is a pretty confusing book if I didn’t went to the seminar. For starter, I didn’t know that the symbols at the beginning of the chapters marked who is talking. I’m not done with the book yet. I’m about halfway, the part where Leo is looking at his book in the library, so it helps to know who is talking.

Usually I just have to read two or three page into the chapter to figure out who is talking. It just makes me really mad to know who is speaking. Not like the book comes right out and tells you. My favorite part of the seminar was the part where they showed the Carnegie’s Hall. It helps to visualize what Leo sees when he breaks into the place. It looks intimidating if you’re standing on the stage by yourself looking towards the empty audience. I like how they show the piano standing by itself on the stage. It adds class to the stage.

I want to go see it now, just to see how big it really is. The second part I liked is when they show the park where Alma Singer goes to read her mom’s letter. It adds the feeling that, as the speaker said, she feel guilty reading the letter so she had to go some place that is nice and quiet so she don’t feel so bad about it. She felt like she needs to hide so she goes there. Again, it’s another place I want to go to see how quiet it is. Although it amazed me that there is a place that hides most of the city in a very urbanized part of the country, New York.

Also I notice on the handout they gave, that Bruno was the only one without a last name. So far the book is kind of sad. I’m not a fan of bad endings so it makes me feels sad for Leo not getting to be with the one he loves. I don’t like how Leo and Alma not ending up together, and the fact that Alma marry another man does not help it even though they loved each other so much. The thing that helps me most with the book other than the symbols is the map that they plot out.

The whole time when they were mentioning the places where Leo has been, I didn’t know the exact location of what their talking about. I mean, I knew he was somewhere in Russia and now in New York but seeing a map always help. It makes everything more understandable. The book so far is still confusing. I haven’t got the point of the book yet. One question that puzzled me is who wrote the History of Love that Zvi is reading. I don’t like how the author uses the title of the book to name her book and how they name every girl Alma.

Everyone has their own identity. It should not be merge together like that. It destroys individuality. In the book, I find that Leo and Bruno are a bit cuckoo in the head. Something is wrong with them. Who goes through their whole life not being around people, trying to avoid people. Leo had a good excuse to hide from people but he didn’t have to go to such extreme. Maybe that’s why he’s a bit mental, being away from human interaction kill of his social skill. That man’s head is not right. He is like a stalker in a sense that he always watching his own son.

But I do wonder if Isaac had ever realized he is watched by his own father. What I find stupid is that Leo did not confront to his son that he is the father and then Isaac die and Leo never had the chance. It’s like an ancient tragedy, no one is happy. Everyone have to be miserable. I do look forward to the end of the book where everything is iron out because I still don’t see how everything is connected together. I don’t see what Alma has to do with Leo. The piece haven’t come together yet.

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