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Notes -
So, what are you reading?
Almost finished Al-Ghazali's Book of Contemplation and trying to go through his Censure of Wealth and Miserliness. Still on Macpherson and others.
Started The Count of Monte Christo.
Had to read that one for French class in high school. The way Edmond got cucked was particularly painful. But his revenge schemes were way too elaborate, and would never work in real life; man needs to learn that shooting is not too good for his enemies.
What I remember most is the way his cellmate promises to teach him "mathematics, physics, history, and the three or four modern languages with which I am acquainted" within a couple of years, in a prison with nothing in the way of materials. Which goes against everything I know of pedagogy. But, then again, Alexandre Dumas was a writer, not a mathematician or a physicist.
Good book. Public domain, too, so lots of adaptations, some of them great. Probably the standard modern version would be the 2002 movie with Jim Caviezel, but if you are ever in the mood for something a little more exotic, Gankutsuou is excellent (and particularly innovative for choosing to tell the story from Albert's POV).
Only ~100 pages in but I've seen the film before and know the story. So far my only complaint is that it can read like the gears in the narrative are slipping and making the story jerk forward unexpectedly. It's probably intended as a clever literary device to create intrigue but it feels like I've stroked out and missed a chapter.
I don't mind a little liberty with realism, it wouldn't be much of story if he just got thrown in prison and died of dysentery.
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