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Book Info

ISBN: 1 84659 005 1
Publication: 21 April 2006
Format: 13 x 20 cm
Edition: Paperback
Pages: 104pp
Price: £8.99

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About the Author
Alberto Manguel is an internationally acclaimed anthologist, translator, essayist, novelist and editor, and is the author of several award-winning books including A Dictionary of Imaginary Places and A History of Reading. He was born in Buenos Aires, became a Canadian citizen in 1982 and now lives in France, where he was named Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

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'A moving and marvelous journey ... the reader is left with a warm fuzzy feeling, a sense of satisfaction and happiness as if one has just been in the presence of one of the greatest literary minds of the last generation.'

- Litpundit.com

Praise for a previous edition

With Borges, by Alberto Manguel

Reviewed by Ian Hanington

Like the short stories of Jorge Luis Borges, Alberto Manguel's With Borges is almost perfect in its brevity. But, as with Borges, brevity in this case doesn't mean simplicity. In fewer than 100 narrow pages, many of them with Sara Facio's evocative photographs, Manguel manages to echo the complexity of his fellow Argentinean's labyrinthine tales, with their blending of fact and fiction, mysticism and mathematics.

With Borges does not include fiction (although the conversations are based on memories of a time long past), but it does combine memoir, biography, and reflections on the works of Borges and of the writers he admired to create an intimate portrait of this enigmatic writer.

Manguel, who is now a Canadian, encountered Borges in 1964, when the writer asked the 16-year-old bookstore clerk if he would read to him three or four evenings a week. Borges, in his mid-60s, had been blind since his late 50s and had a number of people who would read to him, "minor Boswells whose identities are rarely known to one another but who collectively hold the memory of one of the world's great readers". Manguel writes that he did not at the time consider the experience a privilege but found it enjoyable and satisfying: "I didn't take notes because during those evenings I felt too contented."

Visiting Borges's Buenos Aires home was like peering into the mind of the writer. Borges has described in interviews two incidents "of timelessness, of eternity" that affected much of his work, and Manguel finds that "Borges's apartment seemed to me to exist outside time, or rather, in a time made up of Borges's literary experiences."

Now, Manguel realizes what an extraordinary opportunity it was. "His concern was literature, and no writer, in this vociferous century, was as important in changing our relationship to literature as he was," Manguel writes, a statement that the always-modest Borges would have rejected.

For those who enjoy the written word, and especially for those who enjoy the fantastic writing of Borges, Manguel's book is confirmation of the pleasure that words can bring, whether to one of the greatest readers and writers of the 20th century or to a young man who would become one of Canada's most acclaimed writers.

From http://www.straight.com/

More Reviews

'Entertaining, insightful, concise ... a generous overview of Argentina's most important literary son ...' readysteadybook.com

'This delightful book provides readers a key to more than one secret room of Borges's magical worlds.' Mahmud Darwish

'Alberto Manguel is to reading what Casanova was to sex.' Scotland on Sunday

' ... modest and pleasant' The Spectator

'THE MASTER AND MANGUEL ... Manguel may be the most learned reader writing at the moment.' The Globe and Mail

'... his stories about Borges ... [are] wrapped in luminous poetry ... some will find Manguel's insights priceless.' The Toronto Star


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Excerpts
Sometimes he himself chooses a book from the shelves. He knows, of course, where each volume is housed and he goes to it unerringly. But sometimes he finds himself in a place where the shelves are not familiar, in a foreign bookstore for instance, and here something uncanny happens. Borges will pass his hands over the spines of the books, as if feeling his way over the rugged surface of a map in relief and, even if he does not know the territory, his skin seems to read the geography for him...
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