Clásicos que apestan: libros importantísimos que hoy pueden ser un suplicio

📚 BOOKS MENTIONED IN THE VIDEO 🔥 The Divine Comedy — Dante Alighieri 👉 https://amzn.to/3NZgPwO 🔥 Ulysses — James Joyce 👉 https://amzn.to/3MsLAcY ⏳ In Search of Lost Time — Marcel Proust 👉 https://amzn.to/4rAFRAO ⚔️ War and Peace — Leo Tolstoy 👉 https://amzn.to/3LYtcbU 🗡️ Don Quixote — Miguel de Cervantes 👉 https://amzn.to/4rvIZxJ 🏛️ La Regenta — Leopoldo Alas “Clarín” 👉 https://amzn.to/3MsM7vt 🐳 Moby Dick — Herman Melville 👉 https://amzn.to/4tr3OMM 🔥 Paradise Lost — John Milton 👉 https://amzn.to/4bGg7OL There's a widespread idea surrounding classics: if you don't like them, if they bore you, or if you find them difficult, the problem is you. But no. That's not the case. In this video, we talk frankly about something that almost no one dares to say out loud: there are incredibly important classics that, as a modern reading experience, can be a real ordeal if you approach them carelessly. And that doesn't make you a worse reader. Throughout the video, we debunk the myth of the untouchable classic, explain why these difficulties aren't a modern phenomenon—history is full of annotated editions, guides, and reading aids—and analyze several canonical classics that often prove challenging for many people. Not to burn them. Not to insult them. But to understand them better… or to let them go without guilt. I also give you very practical tips for approaching these works without getting bogged down: how to read them, when to read them, which editions to choose, and, above all, when it's best to close them and move on to another book. Because reading isn't a moral obligation. It's an experience. And there's nothing wrong with choosing wisely what you read. 📚 Books mentioned in the video: – The Divine Comedy – Ulysses – In Search of Lost Time – War and Peace – Don Quixote – La Regenta – Moby Dick – Paradise Lost If you're interested in literature without the pretension, subscribe and let's keep talking. 💪 Become a MEMBER of this channel to enjoy perks:    / @semillasdepapel