Readersforum's Blog

November 8, 2011

World literature tour: Argentina

Buenos Aires' celebrated El Ateneo bookstore. Photograph: Daniel Garcia/AFP/Getty Images

This month we’re off to the country that gave us Jorge Luis Borges, as well as many lesser-known but equally dazzling writers.

By Richard Lea

After a month in Colombia, the tour returns with recommendations ranging from Jorge Isaacs’s Maria, described by dande as “One of the most notable works of the Romantic movement in Spanish literature” to Tomás González’s La Luz Difícil, a newly released novel which according to K “Colombian Literature junkies are giving … outstanding reviews”.

Along the way Daryl suggested Elena Garces’s Colombian Women “deserves to be read as an indicator of the contemporary situation of women in many other Latin American countries”, while Rafael Leal cited the “reactionary” philosopher Nicolás Gómez Dávila, who apparently “did not believe in translations and read everything in its original language” – though his own works, consisting “mostly of aphorisms” are available in “Polish, German, Italian and French”. For Leandro, whereas Gabriel García Márquez describes “Latin-American reality”, Fernando Vallejo “describes Colombian reality” in particular, so that Colombians reading Vallejo feel “pain, anger” from descriptions which “destroy our hearts”. Thanks for all these recommendations, especially the outpouring of love for Victor M Roselló’s East of the Orteguaza.

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September 2, 2011

LITERATURE AT EVERY LATITUDE

Beau-Bassin, Mauritius: 20° 14' S 57° 28' E

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A lonely Mauritian boy named Raj befriends David, a young Jewish prisoner stranded on the island nation in 1944.

The Last Brother
By Nathacha Appanah
Translated by Geoffrey Strachan

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August 12, 2011

LITERATURE AT EVERY LATITUDE

Filed under: LITERATURE AT EVERY LATITUDE — Tags: , , , , — Bookblurb @ 5:47 am

Hondarribia, Basque country, Spain: 43° 22' N 1° 49' W

 

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A wartime secret forges a lifelong bond between two women—a wealthy widow and her    servant—who share an  aging villa.

The Wrong Blood
By Manuel de Lope
Translated by John Cullen

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August 6, 2011

LITERATURE AT EVERY LATITUDE

Looking for something outside the English-language canon? Great stories know no borders.

Berlin, Germany: 52° 30' N 13° 23' E

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Germany

Visitation

by Jenny Erpenbeck

The changing face of 20th-century Germany is illuminated through the stories of the diverse inhabitants of a lake house.

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July 7, 2011

Literature at Every Latitude

Durban, South Africa: 29° 53' S 31° 3' E

Looking for something outside the English-language canon? Great stories know no borders.

Click to buy

South Africa

The Book of Happenstance
By Ingrid Winterbach
Translated by Dirk Winterbach

When an Afrikaans lexicographer’s collection of conch shells is stolen, a prime suspect is found hanged and a character from her wild past reemerges in this literary mystery.
                                                                                                                                …read more

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