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shailiestudyjunction's review against another edition
challenging
dark
informative
reflective
tense
slow-paced
4.0
stirlitza's review against another edition
inspiring
lighthearted
mysterious
reflective
relaxing
fast-paced
5.0
mga's review against another edition
2.0
Alguns contos interessantes, mas na sua maioria, não me cativaram muito. Possivelmente a reler um dia
nicarhm's review against another edition
3.5
A collection of pleasant little stories—some much better than others—toying imaginatively with ideas of God and other things, like children do. Some excerpts I particularly enjoyed:
"'Where did you get the story you told me last time?' he begged me then. 'Out of a book?' 'Yes,' I answered sadly, 'the historians have kept it buried there, since it died; that is not so very long ago. Only a hundred years since, it lived—quite carelessly, for sure—on many lips.'" (How Old Timofei Died Singing)
"'I imagine one can never tell whether God is in a story before one has finished it completely. For if only two words of the telling are still missing—indeed, if nothing but the pause after the last word is still outstanding, he may yet come.'" (The Song of Justice)
"'What we feel as spring, God feels as a fleeting little smile passing over the earth. Earth seems to be remembering something; in summer she tells every one about it, until she grows wiser in the great autumnal silence, through which she confides in those who are lonely. All the springs you and I have lived through, put together, still do not suffice to fill a single one of God's seconds. A spring, for God to notice it, may not remain in trees and on the meadows; it must somehow manifest its strength in man, for then it will proceed, as it were, not within time, but rather in eternity and in God's presence.'" (Of One Who Listened to the Stones)
"'The things we experience often cannot be expressed, and any one who insists on telling them nevertheless, is bound to make mistakes.'" (A Story Told to the Dark)
"'Where did you get the story you told me last time?' he begged me then. 'Out of a book?' 'Yes,' I answered sadly, 'the historians have kept it buried there, since it died; that is not so very long ago. Only a hundred years since, it lived—quite carelessly, for sure—on many lips.'" (How Old Timofei Died Singing)
"'I imagine one can never tell whether God is in a story before one has finished it completely. For if only two words of the telling are still missing—indeed, if nothing but the pause after the last word is still outstanding, he may yet come.'" (The Song of Justice)
"'What we feel as spring, God feels as a fleeting little smile passing over the earth. Earth seems to be remembering something; in summer she tells every one about it, until she grows wiser in the great autumnal silence, through which she confides in those who are lonely. All the springs you and I have lived through, put together, still do not suffice to fill a single one of God's seconds. A spring, for God to notice it, may not remain in trees and on the meadows; it must somehow manifest its strength in man, for then it will proceed, as it were, not within time, but rather in eternity and in God's presence.'" (Of One Who Listened to the Stones)
"'The things we experience often cannot be expressed, and any one who insists on telling them nevertheless, is bound to make mistakes.'" (A Story Told to the Dark)
susana82's review against another edition
reflective
slow-paced
3.0
I couldn't engage with this book. Despite being made of short stories, some of them had me so uninterested that I don't even know what happened in them. Others were ok. The writing is simple and nice.
jasminawithab's review against another edition
3.0
how the thimble became god fucked me up for some reason??? im not religious but i find religion fascinating and that story really just hit.
update: ive read more of rilkes work now (stories of god was only my second work at the time) and this is the one that has truly stuck with me. every now and then i think about how the thimble became god and the tale of hands of god.
its one of those books that very quietly seeps into you and i find myself constantly going back to it