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The classic by Latin America's finest writer of the twentieth centuryโa true literary sensationโwith an introduction by cyber-author William Gibson. The groundbreaking trans-genre work of Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) has been insinuating itself into the structure, stance, and very breath of world literature for well over half a century. Multi-layered, self-referential, elusive, and allusive writing is now frequently labeled Borgesian. Umberto Eco's international bestseller, The Name of the Rose , is, on one level, an elaborate improvisation on Borges' fiction "The Library," which American readers first encountered in the original 1962 New Directions publication of Labyrinths . This new edition of Labyrinths , the classic representative selection of Borges' writing edited by Donald A. Yates and James E. Irby (in translations by themselves and others), includes the text of the original edition (as augmented in 1964) as well as Irby's biographical and critical essay, a poignant tribute by Andrรฉ Maurois, and a chronology of the author's life. Borges enthusiast William Gibson has contributed a new introduction bringing Borges' influence and importance into the twenty-first century. Review: Satisfying estrangement for restless, unsold minds - I imagine in my mind what it would be like to have coffee with Luis Borges on a Sunday afternoon. Borges would be wearing a suit and have little cakes on hand, cane leaning on his armrest, as if nothing out of the ordinary were about to occur. Labyrinths is a useful first book to kick off a lifetime investigation into Borges' writings. Borges is truly original as an author as much for his intent as for his achieving it. Not quite Magic Realist, not quite Existentialist nor Kafkan: no one is Borges' equal in taking established assumptions and turning them into curious, elaborate, eruditely-supported flashing crossroads that defy simplification. Even the most unassuming essays like "The Fearful Sphere of Pascal," a subtle historical resketching, are characteristically erudite, yet sticky and complicate the subject irresistibly from your first reading onward. The prickly thorns reach out for your existing education on the subject and are designed to flesh out the glaring inconsistencies you will have read on the subject. The Garden of Forking Paths is an example of prime Borges storytelling at work. The story itself is a ruse. The first reading-through is not the time you are affected most by Borges, but rather only AFTER you have put the book down, when the Borges' physics of Being begin to gnaw at your world of compact, necessary daily conveniences, even in 2005 when we really ought to be intimately familiar with his universe by now. I think ultimately Borges sets tiny mind bombs set to detonate at exactly the time you seek to superimpose a Newtonian universe upon one of his stories, and ultimately, later, when you seek to superimpose order upon your own human experience. The entrance seems the same, but it has clearly moved by the time you exit the story. You become part of the puzzle, and that is the bedazzling signature of Borges, and his unassailable virtue. Everything solid in the universe of daily lived experience becomes compost and peacefully unsettled, as it originally was, before we came along to fix it up like morticians just before the funeral. Review: A great mind and a great writer - Borges should be read more in the United States and, for that matter, in Latรญn America, the soil from which he drew much inspiration. Unlike other regional writers, however, he was not one who narrowly focused on his homeland and people. He looked beyond Argentina to the world at large. There are few stories of the usual type in this volume. Only a few are straightforward exercises in telling a tale, โThe Shape of the Swordโ being the best. Much of what is contained here is fantasy, philosophy and even mathematics. He had a mind that could see the world for what it was and delight in its absurdity.
| Best Sellers Rank | #22,456 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2 in Caribbean & Latin American Literature #218 in Short Stories (Books) #1,314 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 740 Reviews |
T**R
Satisfying estrangement for restless, unsold minds
I imagine in my mind what it would be like to have coffee with Luis Borges on a Sunday afternoon. Borges would be wearing a suit and have little cakes on hand, cane leaning on his armrest, as if nothing out of the ordinary were about to occur. Labyrinths is a useful first book to kick off a lifetime investigation into Borges' writings. Borges is truly original as an author as much for his intent as for his achieving it. Not quite Magic Realist, not quite Existentialist nor Kafkan: no one is Borges' equal in taking established assumptions and turning them into curious, elaborate, eruditely-supported flashing crossroads that defy simplification. Even the most unassuming essays like "The Fearful Sphere of Pascal," a subtle historical resketching, are characteristically erudite, yet sticky and complicate the subject irresistibly from your first reading onward. The prickly thorns reach out for your existing education on the subject and are designed to flesh out the glaring inconsistencies you will have read on the subject. The Garden of Forking Paths is an example of prime Borges storytelling at work. The story itself is a ruse. The first reading-through is not the time you are affected most by Borges, but rather only AFTER you have put the book down, when the Borges' physics of Being begin to gnaw at your world of compact, necessary daily conveniences, even in 2005 when we really ought to be intimately familiar with his universe by now. I think ultimately Borges sets tiny mind bombs set to detonate at exactly the time you seek to superimpose a Newtonian universe upon one of his stories, and ultimately, later, when you seek to superimpose order upon your own human experience. The entrance seems the same, but it has clearly moved by the time you exit the story. You become part of the puzzle, and that is the bedazzling signature of Borges, and his unassailable virtue. Everything solid in the universe of daily lived experience becomes compost and peacefully unsettled, as it originally was, before we came along to fix it up like morticians just before the funeral.
G**S
A great mind and a great writer
Borges should be read more in the United States and, for that matter, in Latรญn America, the soil from which he drew much inspiration. Unlike other regional writers, however, he was not one who narrowly focused on his homeland and people. He looked beyond Argentina to the world at large. There are few stories of the usual type in this volume. Only a few are straightforward exercises in telling a tale, โThe Shape of the Swordโ being the best. Much of what is contained here is fantasy, philosophy and even mathematics. He had a mind that could see the world for what it was and delight in its absurdity.
J**E
Left dazed...
If I was smarter, more well read, or more philosophical in nature I likely would have given this 5 stars. I can't believe it took me over a week to read 250 pages... this book was *dense* yet thoroughly enjoyable and thought provoking. At some point I had to give up trying to read, understand, and retain each individual story as a whole and begin to focus on and underline specific lines and specific ideas in an attempt to glean just a tiny fraction of what the author was trying to impart to the reader. Even though he and I are, apparently, the same... I was surprised when the collection shifted from short fiction to essays and happy when it shifted again to parables. The short works at the end were, perhaps, the easiest for me to grasp, the essays simply required too much knowledge I did not possess, and the fiction largely just flew over my head. At least until I realized I have not the capacity to fully understand with just a cursory reading. As one who cites The Stranger (Everyman's Library) and Notes from Underground (Everyman's Library) as two of my primary influences, I feel like many of the philosophies espoused here were familiar territory... just presented in an incredibly deep and unique way. I wasn't particularly driven in any new direction by the content of the ideas (as best I could understand them), but the style was breathtaking and mind-bending. I was unprepared for the author's predilection for Cervantes Miguel de, religion, the plight of the Jews, and Zeno's paradoxes, but the redundancy probably helped my ability to follow and pretend that I understood. (Although I hate Zeno's paradoxes it is, perhaps again, because I just don't get it.) My grasp of South American history (both literary and political) is tenuous at best and yet another reason I feel like I have missed a large portion of what the author hoped (hopes?) to give to me. And, God, I wish I had a greater appreciation and understanding of Don Quixote... It sounds like I am complaining, but it was amazing to see some ideas I already held to be presented in such beautiful language. "I reflected that there is nothing less material than money, since any coin whatsoever is, strictly speaking, a repertory of possible futures. Money is abstract, I repeated; money is the future tense." Yes. More, please. To have some things that I knew... yet did not know that I knew put in plain black & white in front of me was a thrill. "...except for man, all creatures are immortal, for they are ignorant of death..." With every turn of the page, I found another phrase burned into my mind. And how I wish I'd begun underlining earlier. I will have to read this again in the near future... To the best of my ability to remember, "The Secret Miracle" and "The Immortal" were probably my two favorite short stories. I think they seemed to be the most straight forward and, perhaps, mundane allowing me to finally feel like I understood something. "The Secret Miracle" particularly stuck with me. What a beautifully succinct and poignant tale... As much as the fictions relied on the knowledge of the reader, (should I have been as happy as I was to pick up on the Raskolnikov reference?) the essays were even more daunting. Not to say that I did not benefit from them, but without the base knowledge, I often found myself lost... Lost and disappointed that the short fictions had ended. Which is why, again, I appreciated the structure of this collection placing the short parables at the end giving me some semblance of understanding. I feel as though I could talk about this for ages all the while saying nothing. I don't feel like I'm worthy to press these keys and push my thoughts into the world. But everything that has happened to me and to the Universe as a whole, thus far, has led to this exact and specific present, which I will now make my past. Which does not exist.
C**N
One of those writers you're "supposed to read," presented well.
Borges isn't always as immediately recognizable (at least in my neck of the woods in the US of A) as many of the English-speaking authors we get educated on, but his work is HUGELY influential in several circles, and he was playing with post-modernist ideas before it was even a thing. While translated, and I cannot speak to the degree of translation accuracy since I only speak English, Borges' intent for each piece comes through clearly. Or, at least, as clearly as the several-decades gap between then and now and the deep cut references will allow it to be; this is one of those authors that will inevitably take some degree of study or analysis to pick up on everything, but even though I am certainly missing some of the subtler or niche elements present, these remain remarkably powerful. Also, to judge a book by its cover, but this is a pretty eye-catching cover. I suspect it will really show wear-and-tear with repeat use, and perhaps even more obviously than some books, but for now, it's visually striking in a way Borges deserves.
J**R
intellectuals like this book
not pseudo intellectuals either, real players mind you. you know those guys that are always being cool and thinking stuff? yeah, those guys read this book. so do I. And when I say that I read it I'm not like that dreadlocked hipster who claims he read excerpts, I mean I actually sat down and read the book. mind numbing. Borges is brilliant. This is some of his best stuff. And when I say that it is his best stuff I'm not like that guy who writes haikus on his typewriter and claims that he is heavily influenced by walt whitman. I mean this is actually good stuff. double recommend it to anyone who plays chess AND has a brain. On a scale of one to four I give it a rating of Yesterday.
M**K
Mind expanding
I must admit that Borges is one of those "must read" authors that I had never gotten around to. Don't know why, just hadn't. But now that I have, I understand all the hoopla. His writing shows a classic, authorial imagination par excellence. It is clear that Borges was grandfather to Eco and so many others who write to celebrate and stimulate and challenge the intellect. Labyrinths is a collection of stories revolving--as the planets, the asteroids, et al, do around the sun--around the concept of the labyrinth, whether it be one of time or space or pure imagination. Every story stands on its own; every story illuminates another facet of the cosmic jewel of labyrinth-ness. Have you ever noticed how a wonderful writer gives so much to his audience? Borges certainly proves that hypothesis in this remarkable collection.
A**S
A MUST READ!
This is easily one of the most fascinating books I have ever read.
J**I
"The beginner with Borges can find a seductive entrance...
...to his enchantment through the short stories collected in "Labyrinths" (1962), which transmits his poetic magic irresistibly even through translation." So wrote Clive James in his remarkable book, Cultural Amnesia: Necessary Memories from History and the Arts . Admittedly, I'm growing "long in the tooth" to begin Borges, and since I never had, and he is one of the "giants" south of the Rio Grande, the question nagged: If not now, when?" I also tucked away a significant caveat of James': that Borges never objected to the junta that ruled Argentina in the early `80's. In fact, he famously proclaimed that "he never read newspapers," and James drew the proper and excoriating parallel with the Germans who proclaimed they had "no idea" what was occurring in those concentration camps. This book is divided into three sections. Most of the book is short fictional stories, far ranging in subject matter, and in my opinion, quality. The second section is rather straightforward critical essays, covering such subjects as the Argentinian Writer and Tradition, Franz Kafka, Paul Valรฉry and other literary figures. The third section is eight short parables. An introduction is provided by William Gibson, a science fiction writer most famous for his 1984 book, Neuromancer . The connection was hard to fathom. Borges displays an astonishing erudition of the contemporary and ancient worlds across metaphysics, religion, history, literature and the arts. The very nature of time, and the choices one makes are a recurring theme, and certainly the word "labyrinth" features in most every fictional story. The maze that is life. I found the story "Garden of the Forking Paths" recalling the best of W.G. Sebald and Jarvier Marias. Of course, the actual antecedents are reversed. How much of an influence did he have on these writers? Time never seems to be linear in his stories; the choices are multiple, so there is a quantum mechanics edge to them. And at any given point in time, positions are only so many "possibilities." In "The Secret Miracle" Borges uses an epigraph from the Koran, long before many in the West did, for a story about a Czech Jew facing the firing squad. Time does a major compression in the story, as it supposedly does, at the moment of death. And for the following story, "Three Versions of Judas," I was impressed that the one line he chose from T. E. Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom for the epigraph was: "There seemed a certainty in degradation." Other stories involve Indians dying in prison, and a woman carefully plotting the ultimate revenge for the suicide of her husband. And "The Immortals" seems to be a rehash, with variations, of Illiad . "Funes the Memorious" concerns an autistic savant lacking, as they do, an ability to reason. In the essay section, there is a reasonable clear discussion of Zeno's paradox. As with all collections, the quality of the stories, and the reader's reception to them, are variable. With these, I found the variation extreme. Some stories were well-composed, with incisive passages. Others, I was left wondering: Maybe it's my fault? I just don't get it. And then others, I finished convinced that this was a literary version of a Jackson Pollack painting. Borges took various erudite and insightful sentences, and splashed them on the page, with no apparent connective tissue, as though he was putting the reader on: You don't see the connections; then it is your fault. In real life, he seemed to exhibit some of these "poseur" qualities. Also, as an aside, and confirming what another reviewer pointed out: there are a large number of misspellings in this book that a basic run through spell-check would have corrected. I'd love for a commenter to urge me to reconsider, but I think this will be the only volume of Borges that I'll read. 4-stars.
A**Y
I'm more than happy
great book, arrived on time, in new condition to a good price, what more can I say. keep up the good work
S**T
Doesn't contain the Aleph
Great stories from an author who many contemporary authors cite as one of their favourites. I felt sure this short story collection would include the one I particularly wanted to read; 'The Aleph' ; I should have checked - it didn't.
M**O
Livro importante
Gostei muito. Foi para estudo.
S**A
Worth it
Print and Page quality is goodโฆno issues whatsoever.
V**.
Good product
Good product
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