As many of the long-time followers of this blog know, I originally started out on the classic literature side of tumblr, which is what lead to my venturing into bsd. As an homage to my roots as a classic lit enthusiast, I’ll be going through all the works that I’ve read written by bsd authors:
The Spider’s Thread by Akutagawa
This short story is brought up in a lot of animes, which is unfortunately the most likely way western bsd fans. I could make an entire separate post of commentary on how the American school system doesn’t cover most foreign literature (outside of English [as in from England] and French works), and that is an absolute travesty. However, that’s not what we’re covering right now.
Anyway. The Spider’s Thread is a very short story—like two pages at most. You can go read it now. For all the other entries I plan on rating the novels out of 5, but this one’s truly too short to rate. If you wanna read it you can find a hundred pdfs online. The same probably goes for most works of classic literature, so. Go wild enjoy the wonderful world of free online pdfs.
The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe
I was probably assigned other works by Poe, but this one is most likely his most famous short story. I was assigned it in middle school/high school/ and at least twice in college. Again, very short short story—you can read it in a few minutes tops.
5/5 for the sole reason of it aligning with my personal sense of humor. I get that it’s not supposed to be funny, but unreliable narrators are and will always be hilarious to me. I love a guy insisting that he’s not crazy while he’s off murdering a guy. Cask of Amontillado-core protagonist. Funny because E.A. Poe also wrote Cask of Amantillado. I’m out here starting to suspect that E.A. Poe just really loved writing his unnamed unreliable narrator protagonists.
Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
I’ve never read Tom Sawyer, but in 11th grade my class read Huckleberry Finn. 3/5 because I don’t like the way it was taught in class, but I did enjoy analyzing it more than some other books we did.
Crime and Punishment by Dostoyevsky
Currently reading it so I can’t give much feedback, but so far I’d like this guy (Raskolnikov not Dostoyevsky) to meet Meursault from The Stranger. If anyone’s made this crossover, please send it to me. And if not and you wanna go make it yourself—please I’ll love you forever.
Dracula by Bram Stoker
I mean we’ve all done Dracula Daily. Or at least I’ll assume you’ve heard of it. 5/5, Mina’s best girl, Quincey’s best boy, I have very basic opinions but I’m standing by them.
--Bonus
The Stranger by Camus
Meursault the prison is clearly named after Meursault, the fictional character who famously goes to prison, right. We’re all on the same page about this, right?
Anyway if you’ve never heard of or read the stranger, [spoilers] it’s about this guy who kills a guy for no reason (“it was just so hot outside, idk what happened but now there’s a dead guy, this is a good enough criminal defense right? You’re not gonna send me to jail for just this one little mistake---oh you’re giving me the death penalty? Ah. I see.”) Solid 4/5—points deducted for being a little slow by some parts (although I can’t vouch for how it is in the original French, this was only my impression from the English translation I read)
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After making this list, it’s clear that I haven’t read too many books my bsd authors, so next years my anniversary special will be more about the classic literature I have read. I do plan to keep posting until then. So please enjoy another year of the anti-dazai blog!!
I love Beast with every fiber of my being I swear. Akutagawa is there like “it never would have been possible [for me to be in the mafia]” while his killing count is probably only marginally lower than Atsushi's
Has anyone ever watched lala land for the first time while in their bsd phase? ( with your fave ship being shin soukoku )
Well I have.
Thoughts on sskk?
I like it but fandom really doesn't do them justice. I've yet to see a depiction of them in a romantic sense that I like. Ppl will write essays dissecting skk but completely drop the ball when it comes to sskk and just reduce their relationship to toxic yaoi when it's more nuanced than that. A key aspect of sskk is how they continuously trigger each other's insecurities bc they see what they are lacking in each other (Atsushi has Dazai's approval and the companionship of the other agency members, Akutagawa has learned to live without the martyr complex displayed by Atsushi) and that's why they are able to grow together. However, fandom will look at this and just go "hehe cat and dog couple who act like they hate each other but are in luv"
Funny story, after my English teacher finished his lecture, the students who still had questions came up to him. While they had their own discussion me and my friend were discussing the next topic that he gave a brief introduction of and I explained it to her and gave her some examples I made up.
Later we ran into him, said hi and he told us he heard our conversation. "Keep it up" He said then left. However for some reason I thought he said "Give it up" and I stood there frozen in shock while my friend clapped. I was just like "What?" and my friend was like "Yay, he said we should keep it up" That's when I realized oh, he wasn't telling me that my pursuits are meaningless like most adults in my life so that's kind of funny.
consider: teenagers aren’t apathetic about everything they’re just used to you shitting all over whatever they show excitement about
“#akuatsu” WRONG. that is TOP atsushi and BOTTOM akutagawa. learn your yaoi etiquette.
honestly bsd lore should be studied and have explanation and theory videos about it why is this niche empty
Genshin x Games: Diluc as Kratos
Akutagawa ryuunoske ⊂(・﹏・⊂)(つ≧▽≦)つ sskk My loves (*˘︶˘*).。*♡
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