The latest haul from my neighbourhood bookstore!
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Syria
seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Argentina
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malta
The latest haul from my neighbourhood bookstore!
"İsterseniz yanlış düşünün, ama her durumda kendi kafanızla düşünün." Doris Lessing
Doris Lessing, Philip Glass’ kitchen, March 10, 1990 (photo: Allen Ginsberg, courtesy Stanford University Libraries/Allen Ginsberg Estate) #dorislessing #philipglass #TheMakingoftheRepresentativeforPlanet8 #allenginsberg (at New York, New York)
A good reminder from Doris Lessing. Have a great weekend everyone! #dorislessing #doitnow (at Studio Martina Flor)
Marjan: “The story is about a couple. They bought a big house and have a lot of babies. It’s specifically about their fifth child. I don’t want to have children. I’m not good with them and don’t know what do do with them. My Mom lives in Iran and really wants grandchildren. She already made some baby things. When I see my friends and their kids, I just really don’t see myself having that life. Maybe it’s selfish, but I have a lot of ideas and projects that I prefer to dedicate my life to.” @marjanfarsad #TheFifthChild #DorisLessing / @theubc for #subwaybookreview #newyork 🗽 (at Lorimer Street)
I often think about this quote from Doris Lessing, and how her actions may have been received in the 1940s (when she left her husband and children), and how they may be received now.
LIBRERÍA Doris Lessing Canta la hierba
LEER EN: https://memoriasdelcafe.blogspot.com/2025/05/doris-lessing.html
RESEÑA EN EL CAFÉ La violencia en el corazón del silencio.
Con Canta la hierba, Doris Lessing debuta con una novela incisiva que descompone los mecanismos íntimos y sociales del colonialismo en África. Ambientada en la Rodesia del Sur de mediados del siglo XX, narra la historia de Mary Turner, una mujer blanca que, tras un matrimonio sin amor, se ve atrapada en una granja aislada, rodeada de un paisaje hostil y una estructura racial asfixiante.
Desde las primeras páginas, con la noticia del asesinato de Mary a manos de su criado negro, Moses, la novela se lanza como una autopsia moral. No solo del crimen, sino de todo un orden colonial basado en la represión, el miedo y el silencio. Mary, con su desprecio por los negros y su miedo al deseo que le provoca uno de ellos, encarna una contradicción feroz: víctima y verdugo de un sistema que la enloquece.
Lessing escribe con una prosa sobria y despiadada. La naturaleza africana, más que decorado, actúa como fuerza opresiva y simbólica: un recordatorio constante de lo que no puede ser dominado. La violencia no es solo física, sino psíquica y estructural. La tragedia no es un accidente, sino una consecuencia inevitable del sistema colonial.
Publicada en 1950, la novela fue considerada transgresora por abordar, aunque con sutileza, las tensiones raciales y sexuales que el discurso colonial prefería ignorar. Hoy se mantiene como una obra esencial, lúcida y perturbadora.
En el crujido seco de la hierba que canta, Lessing nos recuerda que todo imperio se desmorona primero en la conciencia de quienes fingen no escuchar.
Julio César Pisón Café Mientras Tanto