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Armenian Maran as Macondo's second chance
You only need to finish the first page of Three Apples Fell from the Sky to understand that Narine Abgaryan opens a discussion with Gabriel García Márquez. This is a gentle yet confident dialogue where Narine gives her perspective on lives impacted by global tragedies and personal failures. She takes Macondo, moves it to the Armenian landscape, fills it with typical Armenians with their own mentality, customs, stubborn characters, and unbendable beliefs, and puts them throug
Mar 134 min read


Maju's Mad Day
Maju, a loving and caring nanny living in Rio de Janeiro, wakes up one day and decides to break free from an insane world built on inequality and injustice. Her place in society is decided long before she has a chance to choose anything for herself: by birth, by poverty, and by the absence of what most people take for granted - education, friendships, community, family. Maju understands that no one sees a person behind the white uniform of a maid. That uniform erases personal
Jan 223 min read


Catherine Gives Us a New Perspective on Motherhood
If you’re a parent in your 30s or 40s, chances you read one or two books on child development, emotional intelligence, or whatever new concept Instagram-certified psychologists are currently selling. And sure, who doesn’t want to be a great mother or father? But aren’t we asking a bit too much of ourselves? Or, more precisely, isn’t this time and society expecting far too much from parents? Do we really have to bend our entire lives to fit the routine of a two-year-old? Do we
Jan 153 min read


Nnu Ego, a Woman Who Did Everything Right
Buchi Emecheta "The Joys of Motherhood". Go to school. Get high grades. Go to university. Find a good job. Start a company. Find a partner. Have kids. Take out a mortgage. Don’t forget to save for your retirement. Sleep well. Eat well. Exercise. Meditate. Maintain friendships. Nurture a hobby. After doing all this, can you still imagine yourself dying alone on the side of the road? That is exactly what happens to Nnu Ego She did everything right. She followed all Ibo traditio
Jan 103 min read


Shame as a Driving Force behind David's Toxic Masculinity
Nicolas Padamsee "England is mine". David is a shy, timid, painfully unoutspoken teenager trying to figure out his life. Most of the time, he simply disappears into the music of his favourite artist, Karl Williams, because real life offers little competition. He lives between two worlds: his very middle-class, emotionally correct mother’s house, and his very working-class, proudly trashy father’s home, where keeping dirty dishes in the bedroom for days is not a problem but a
Jan 64 min read


Is it Time to Give Up National Identities?
Shalom Auslander "Mother for dinner". Seventh did his best to run away from his family - its traditions, narratives, and even personal connections. However, when Mudd, Seventh’s mother, dies, the time comes for all the siblings to gather one last time. Mudd, cruel and unbendable as ever, demands one final wish before anyone can receive their inheritance. According to the ancient tradition of the Cannibals, they have to Eat her . Literally. Mudd, the gatekeeper of all Cannibal
Dec 31, 20254 min read


Gifted ... or Not so Much
Suzumi Suzuki "Gifted". Gifted claims to be a story about a mother–daughter relationship at an intense crossroads in their lives. The mother is dying; the daughter, who works in Tokyo’s entertainment district, quits her job to spend time with her. That framing sets the bar very high. One would reasonably expect tense conversations, long-buried arguments, revelations about shared past. At the very least, the novel could offer insight into Tokyo’s underbelly or into how elderl
Dec 29, 20253 min read


Everyone Wants Her as an Aunty
Natalia Ginzburg "Sagittarius". For women the first half is preloaded with obligations: be a good daughter, a tolerable wife, and naturally - a mother. Biology and society clap politely while they ticks the boxes. And then, unexpectedly, the list runs out. Young enough to hope, solvent enough to try Natalia Ginzburg tells a story of such a woman, firmly planted in the “second half” of her life. She has money to spend, time to waste, and an explosive amount of energy to finall
Dec 29, 20253 min read


Fujino, a Man who Never Grew Up
Yuko Tsushima "Territory of light". Territory of Light is a novel about single motherhood in 1970s Japan. Its narrator, recently abandoned by her husband, recounts the first year in a new apartment she shares with her young daughter. The book is praised for its unflinching portrayal of motherhood, loneliness, and the quiet violence of a rigid society that expects women to endure rather than resist. But hovering in the shadows of this story is a character who deserves far mor
Dec 29, 20253 min read
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