Hi Everyone,
Lately, I have thought about the descriptions of rooms and apartments in older books that are meant to portray the person who inhabits them as poor.
... and found it interesting that they don't really translate to today's property market.
Even one of literature's poorest souls, like Rodion Raskolnikov, wouldn't be seen as that poor in today's property market in some cities based on his room. When Bukowski's alter-ego bum Henry Chinaski is not actually homeless, he also seems to live in relatively decent conditions. I also had to make some effort to feel sorry for Nick Hornby's protagonist in High Fidelity – alright, I get your heart is broken, but you have YOUR OWN apartment in one of London's most fashionable neighbourhoods.
Have any of you had similar thoughts, and are there some funny examples that come to mind?
CrazyCatLady108 t1_itvyki2 wrote
>like Rodion Raskolnikov, wouldn't be seen as that poor in today's property market in some cities based on his room
you mean the one he rents and also the one he is not paying for and thus is in danger of being evicted. or how he cannot afford food. or how he owns a single set of clothes.