ashleypowell

Ashley Powell Powell itibaren Çiftepınar Köyü, 25930 Çiftepınar Köyü/Pazaryolu/Erzurum, トルコ itibaren Çiftepınar Köyü, 25930 Çiftepınar Köyü/Pazaryolu/Erzurum, トルコ

Okuyucu Ashley Powell Powell itibaren Çiftepınar Köyü, 25930 Çiftepınar Köyü/Pazaryolu/Erzurum, トルコ

Ashley Powell Powell itibaren Çiftepınar Köyü, 25930 Çiftepınar Köyü/Pazaryolu/Erzurum, トルコ

ashleypowell

Love love love it!

ashleypowell

As in "A Midsummer Night's Dream," "Hamlet" and "Antony and Cleopatra," Shakespeare in "As You Like It" is able to join disparate elements in unusual proportion into a unified whole of tone and mood which may be rationalized but never completely explained. What I love about this play is the way in which it develops a conventionally suspenseful plot--complete with goodies and baddies, action-packed scuffles and wrestling matches, lovers "meeting cute," etc.--at breakneck speed for all of the first act, and then slows to something close to a halt once it reaches the Forest of Arden. This is as it should be, since this forest is a place of magical transformation just as certainly as Oberon and Titania's fairie wood, a place where time stops and love grows and both are discussed and exemplified in language both witty and profound. At the end, all plot strands are resolved in what should be an unsatisfactory fashion, but somehow still manages to satisfy not only the characters themselves but also the audience, who have both been transformed by the timeless experience of Arden.

ashleypowell

A stupid book. I can't remember whether or not Dubner spent more time worshipping Levitt – a Harvard grad and a 'rogue' economist only to 5th graders – or if Levitt spent more time posturing as some kind of off-the-wall, holy shit this is how it really works teller of fables. Levitt's arguments would be tolerable if only they were presented in a straightforward manner. But alas, it's all wrapped up in such a repugnant air of pretension to make it unreadable. Stupid.