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In the first of his books I read he tells the story of a knife fight in a bar; not in itself unusual
Kenny Shovel said:In the first of his books I read he tells the story of a knife fight in a bar; not in itself unusual. But as I read other collections of his work I would find a story which ended up with the main character back in the same bar retelling the fight from a different point of view. This re-telling happened a number of times in different stories, and I seem to remember that each time I failed to predict that it was going to end up back in that same bar.
Shade,Shade said:Perhaps he's one of those authors ... who is best read at a certain age, and I am not yet there, or - horror - already past?
czgibson said:Has anyone ever read any Borges?
Morty said:Borges is so refreshingly original and imaginative to read. His wisdom and knowledge knows no boundaries! I've read several of his short stories (my favorite one is "The Other") and his poetry as well. You know when you've read him that you'll never read anything similar to it again, ever. And the way he draws parallels between writers such as Kafka and Kierkegaard is really quite interesting.
That he was never awarded a Nobel Prize for Literature is a blow to the prestige of the Nobel Committee.
I must try more Borges. I've read a few of his collections - Labyrinths, The Aleph, The Book of Sand - but have never got much out of them. I invariably find them difficult to penetrate, and the descriptions of the stories in the blurb (eg Pierre Menard, author of The Quixote, "about a man who rewrites Don Quixote word for word") invariably are more interesting and engaging than the stories themselves. Perhaps he's one of those authors (as I discovered recently when Madame Bovary was catapulted into my top ten books ever ever list, having previously bored me stupid when I was younger) who is best read at a certain age, and I am not yet there, or - horror - already past?