So yes, I did enjoy reading this and it also it did make me smile. After all although we do have free will sometimes things crop up which do effect us. In the midst of this Kundera is trying to insert his philosophies on destiny and action , something I’m still not too sure about. From then onwards the book focuses on the relationships between six individuals (and all are products of the background they grew up in) and how they interact with each other. It’s Prague , 1968 and the Russians have invaded it. It’s very often you manage to read a book which is philosophical, political and has romantic background. So this time round, although skeptical I gave The Unbearable lightness of Being a chance and I loved it. I dismissed it as pretentious European artsy rubbish (and in a way I still dislike books that follow that type of style) and promised I would never read him again. I had read ‘The Book of Laughter and Forgetting’ and I hated it. My first encounter with a Kundera novel was in 1999.
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