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Reseñado en España el 13 de marzo de 2025
El libro llegó estropeado.
Mariana
Reseñado en Brasil el 28 de enero de 2025
Han Kang é uma maestra na construção das narrativas dentro de narrativas nesta obra prima. Vale cada linha. Impressionante e original.
Hanna
Reseñado en Arabia Saudita el 21 de febrero de 2024
I really loved the book
Marilyn
Reseñado en México el 3 de diciembre de 2024
The Vegetarian is a haunting and beautiful masterpiece. This book explores identity, desire, and rebellion in a way that is both unsettling and captivating. It’s a powerful, unforgettable story 🖤❤️
Cliente
Reseñado en Italia el 19 de octubre de 2024
ToConsiderAsABookToReadIfYou'reReadyToFaceAn Asian significanceOf silenceAnd contemplating.
Medama-Oyaji
Reseñado en España el 10 de marzo de 2023
Cómo se aprecia en la foto, las hojas me han llegado todas desalineadas y la portada dañada (el embalaje estaba perfecto)Lo demás perfecto, un libro indespensable.
Cliente de Kindle
Reseñado en España el 20 de febrero de 2020
Sin duda uno de los mejores que he leído últimamente. Han Kang no defrauda con ninguno de sus libros. Es una maestra describiendo tantos horrores con la sencillez de su prosa.
JACQUELINE
Reseñado en España el 18 de noviembre de 2020
Al principio es interesante pero luego, en mi opinion, se va retorciendo la historia y pierde credibilidad.
Web E.
Reseñado en España el 14 de octubre de 2019
Vino rápido y en buenas condiciones. El libro es excelente, muy humano y muy recomendable.
The Zax
Reseñado en España el 5 de septiembre de 2018
No sabía que clase de libro era realmente, estaba siendo recomendado por varios sitios y me aventuré. Algo perdido al principio, un poco extraño e insólito, pero luego no tanto.
Ruska
Reseñado en España el 3 de mayo de 2017
Me ha impresionado mucho, hacía tiempo que no leía algo tan perturbador. No quiero decir nada más porque creo que es mejor dejarse sorprender por este magnífico libro.
Steve P
Reseñado en Australia el 12 de diciembre de 2017
A fascinating read. Very different to anything I've read before. I had no idea where it was headed and had to keep turning the pages on a very strange and tragic journey. Explores some pretty deep and dark themes - mental illness, anorexia, and the way we relate to people who make choices that are different to ours. A difficult but rewarding read.
Richard R.
Reseñado en España el 18 de octubre de 2016
This is a story told in 3 parts (or 3 chapters, if you like).The first part is told in first person from the point of view of Yeong-hye's husband.The second part is told from an omniscient narrator's point of view.The third part is told in present time, from an omniscient narrator looking from the perspective of Yeong-hye's sister.I found the changes in voice a bit jarring as I moved from one chapter to the next, but that was simply a momentary effect.The book centers around Yeong-hye, a Korean woman who slowly begins to go mad as the conformant pressures of Korean society begin to wear on her. Her madness first manifests itself in the desire to become vegetarian, slowly progresses until her desire is to become a tree.I think the story would have been more powerful without the second chapter, which, in my opinion, served no purpose other than a gratuitous sexual fantasy (and which drops the rating from 5 to 4 stars). While the second chapter shows up the precarious mental state of Yeong-hye, the chapter is not really about her: she is the object of the chapter, not the subject. Perhaps the author intended it to be that way. Perhaps there is some message about the status of women in Korean society in that chapter. However, nothing is lost by omitting it. Since it doesn't really chronicle Yeong-hye's madness any further. Without it, the last chapter will have some unanswered questions, but ... I think it would add to the story.It can be a difficult read.The first chapter starts off quite delightful and I found it reminiscent in style to Roald Dahl - growing ever darker and more emotionally intense.The second chapter was bizarre and reminded me a lot of 'Perfume' by Patrick Susskind (it is not just me, everyone at my book discussion group thought this chapter to be bizarre).The third chapter is sad, and lonely. The kind of feeling you had as a child sitting and watching the rain outside and wishing you could go outside instead of being stuck inside.
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