As much as I had a lot of questions through our initial readings from the book, now I feel that a lot of those same questions are answered through simple resolutions of conflict that grew throughout the story. Watching the political/military conflict unfold and how it resolved (both positively and negatively) a lot of major strife in the lives of some of the characters who were involved in it was definitely one of the more fascinating story arcs. I will say that although I definitely don't necessarily agree with much of the politics that went on in the closing chapters, I decidedly prefer that reality compared to the way I thought it would play out based on the beginning- I thought that much of House of Spirits' meaning was originally subjective. With that said, it is strange to see Jaime and Amanda's relationship fall out of order due to a lack of love since love seemed to be such a key theme or tenet of House of Spirits. I really enjoyed seeing Esteban Trueba finally find redemption in the closing of the book, as his end is more peaceful than a reckoning which would have been violent and deserved earlier in the book. Finally, it was really cool looking back at how the book is pretty wrapped up in patterns, especially regarding the lives and deaths of main characters. Like I mentioned in the title, that's reflected with the way the book begins and ends with an identical phrase.
Edit: I commented on Rachael and Moriah's posts.
Edit: I commented on Rachael and Moriah's posts.
Comments