book data
2,933 ratings,
4.53
average rating, 226 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
1979
by Planeta
(first published 1944)
details
Hardcover
setting
Portugal
isbn
8432071129
description
Reading Jorge Luis Borges is an experience akin to having the top of one's head removed for repairs. First comes the unfamiliar breeze tickling your …more
find at:
Amazon • WorldCat • more options…
There is a good chance some of your friends read this book. Sign in to see!
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1001 Books You M...: Which one did you just finish? | 2731 | 6174 | 5 hours, 44 min ago | |
| The Book Challenge: Bonnie's Theme Challenge | 21 | 44 | Dec 17, 2009 08:20PM | |
| Read a book from ...: Argentina | 3 | 69 | Sep 01, 2009 12:09PM |
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4,171)
All ratings
|
5 stars (1905)
|
4 stars (752)
|
3 stars (210)
|
2 stars (46)
|
1 star (20)
|
avg 4.53
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in June, 2008
The peer pressure from my intellectually superior friends finally shamed me into reading this (as I had no Borges under my belt). Obviously from the 5 stars, I'm glad I caved in. This is a collection of 17 of his "best" short stories, held together merely by the thread that they are like nothing else you've ever read or even thought about.
Not every story is perfection, but all are surprising, irritating, challenging and somehow rewarding. Standouts are "Pierre Menard,...more
Not every story is perfection, but all are surprising, irritating, challenging and somehow rewarding. Standouts are "Pierre Menard,...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
1 comment
Read in August, 2007
Reading Ficciones takes time. It is Jorge Luis Borges' most well-known collection of short stories, and it is full of dense, imaginative pieces that are full of lots of stuff, and to get out of them what he has put into them, readers need to commit to reading slowly and carefully.
There are two interrelated elements, I think, that make reading Borges so challenging: the fantastic vision (read: like a fantasy), and the prose.
The Fantasy: Many pieces in Ficciones take place...more
There are two interrelated elements, I think, that make reading Borges so challenging: the fantastic vision (read: like a fantasy), and the prose.
The Fantasy: Many pieces in Ficciones take place...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
recommends it for:
anyone seeking to reaffirm that it's okay to let go of past values.
Another fantastic book , specifically the short story Pierre Menard, Author of Quixote. In it, Borges sets up the story of the fictitious author, Pierre Menard, giving a list of his works and achievments. Everything, from his structuralist, Saussarian view of language, to his pragmatic view of history, convince the open minded reader that those who propose we somehow rewind the clock and return to "tradition" are wasting their time; while some values of the past, to be sure, should b...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
A translation of a Spanish-writing writer who first read literature in English. He oversaw the translations of his own works to the extent that it may be fair to call this more than a translation.
For me, this collection, more than any other single text, directed my current interest in reading, wrting, and theorizing about reading and writing.
For me, this collection, more than any other single text, directed my current interest in reading, wrting, and theorizing about reading and writing.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Todavía no supero este libro. Creo, el mejor de todos los libros de cuentos Borgianos. Todavía no supero que los habitantes de tlön no crean en el espacio y su lenguaje este compuesto de una sucesión infinita de verbos. Todavía no supero la concepción de un empresa como la Pierre Menard, que buscas escribir el Quijote, me rindo a ayudarle en lo que pueda. Todavía no supero la daga, ni los laberintos, ni los tigres, ni el sur, ni las bibliotecas, ni al otro...
Todavía no supero...more
Todavía no supero...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Read in January, 1991
Reading Borges is a true pleasure, first and foremost. He ranks among the great short story writers of the 20th Century, and one of the most creative of all time.
As a writer, he truly embraces the patrimony of Western literature (and the Eastern literature accepted into it) and revels in it. While being firmly planted in the flow of tradition, its not surprising that he would be accepted by moderns. Indeed, one might think some of his work were Postmodern or Deconstructionist at fir...more
As a writer, he truly embraces the patrimony of Western literature (and the Eastern literature accepted into it) and revels in it. While being firmly planted in the flow of tradition, its not surprising that he would be accepted by moderns. Indeed, one might think some of his work were Postmodern or Deconstructionist at fir...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in March, 2009
The Martel-Harper Challenge is based on a list of books that the Canadian author Yann Martel has sent to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper to read. I find this list fascinating, and I love the letters that Martel sends along with his book choices. He sends a new one every two weeks, which I think is a little unfair, as the Prime Minister is probably a busy man. But it doesn't really matter, since it doesn't seem like he even looks at them. He certainly does not bother to respond to the lett...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2009
These stories are really ideas, games. Not logical, or sequential, particularly in the first section. The reader doesn't have an ordinary narrative to follow or hold on to. Borges is fond of the labyrinth.
He is playing with creation, words, content, association--not only with the idea of fiction, but the aspect of life that is really a story. Where is the truth? Our knowledge is framed by context, shaped by chance and outside forces, by the very language we speak and think in. ...more
He is playing with creation, words, content, association--not only with the idea of fiction, but the aspect of life that is really a story. Where is the truth? Our knowledge is framed by context, shaped by chance and outside forces, by the very language we speak and think in. ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2009
By far the most thought-provoking and bizarre (in the best possible way) collection of short stories that I have ever read. This is my first experience with Borges and while it took a little while to get used to his style, I am so glad that I took the time and gave it a chance. These stories are very dense and the vocabulary is difficult, however, it is well worth it to sit down with Ficciones (and a dictionary) and enter a strange and very real, fictional world. My favorite stories are The C...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
“Senin labirentinde üç çizgi fazla”, dedi neden sonra.
“Ben tek düz çizgiden oluşma bir Yunan labirenti bilirim. O çizgi boyunca öyle çok feylesof yolunu yitirmiştir ki, sıradan bir dedektif haydi haydi yitirebilir. Bir dahaki gelişte Scarlach, ardıma düştüğünde, A’da bir cinayet işler gibi yap (ya da gerçekten işle), sonra B’de, A’dan sekiz kilometre ötede ikinci cinayet, sonra C’de, A ve B’den dörder kilometre uzaklıkta, ikisinin ortasında ü...more
“Ben tek düz çizgiden oluşma bir Yunan labirenti bilirim. O çizgi boyunca öyle çok feylesof yolunu yitirmiştir ki, sıradan bir dedektif haydi haydi yitirebilir. Bir dahaki gelişte Scarlach, ardıma düştüğünde, A’da bir cinayet işler gibi yap (ya da gerçekten işle), sonra B’de, A’dan sekiz kilometre ötede ikinci cinayet, sonra C’de, A ve B’den dörder kilometre uzaklıkta, ikisinin ortasında ü...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in July, 2005
recommends it for:
short story readers
Borges is one of the gods of the short story. He's one of the most inventive, clever writers of all time. Spanish-based authors like him, Marquez, Cortazar, and the immortal Cervantes all belong in the pantheon of all-time amazing authors. Borges didn't write long fiction because he didn't need to. This collection offers up the very best that Borges wrote.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in November, 2009
recommends it for:
Tata J (no one else among my friends can enjoy this book)
For me, reading has always been like connecting your brain to that of the book's author. Since January of this year, I have already finished 100 books and I never had experienced delving into a mind as scintillating as that of Jorge Luis Borges, the Spanish author of this strangely amazing (or amazingly strange) book - FICCIONES which means FICTIONS.
To understand the book, you really have to slow down and reflect on each phrase. It is different from reading Salman Rushdie who I find ...more
To understand the book, you really have to slow down and reflect on each phrase. It is different from reading Salman Rushdie who I find ...more
Like this review?
yes
2 comments
Read in January, 2009
Borges's collection of stories is impeccable - and illustrates adeptly the way in which literature and literary criticism can successfully coincide. Of course, "Pierre Menard" is an essential reference for anyone dealing with postmodern theory/authorship; Borges perhaps presents the same concepts (through this story & others) in a more useful way - because his criticism is the literature, and vice versa. It is also remarkable how, for his time, Borges presupposes not only literary mo...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 1988
recommended to Cecilia by:
a teacher from highshool
Otro del Maestro y otro de mis favoritos. Imposible no perderse en "el jardín de los senderos que se bifurcan", o imaginarse detrás del escritorio en "la biblioteca de Babel", o desear ser el soñador detrás del humano en "Las ruinas circulares". No importa cuantas veces lo lea, siempre quiero leerlo otra vez.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in May, 2009
Astounding in every way... One of the finest collections of short stories in existence! I first read most of these stories back in 1987 in an anthology called *Labyrinths* that was a selection of material from various Borges' books. Most of the stories that appear in *Fictions* also appear in *Labyrinths* but there are several good ones that don't, including the essay-stories 'The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim' and 'A Survey of the Works of Herbert Quain', and the gauncho tales 'The End' and 'The Sout...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
Arguably the most surreal and beautiful collection of short stories ever written. It will change your view of reality.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in October, 2002
recommends it for:
Rob
The fake essays and the immortal "Libaray of Babylon" are worth the price of admission.
-m
-m
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in December, 2009
4 stars because it was my real introduction to Borges (I went immediately from the seminar in which we read "Pierre Menard" to the bookstore to grab it), although the translation is not the best. Unusually helpful Amazon reviews confirmed my suspicions that Andrew Hurley's translations are rather flat. I then picked up "Borges, A Reader" -- which has translations by Di Giovanni, who worked with Borges himself -- and comparing "The Lottery in Babylon" shows that Hurl...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2009
Ficciones is a collection of seventeen short stories that explore ideas like infinity, recursion, language, time, and perception. All things I am drawn to, but for some reason I didn't connect with this book. It seems like each story takes one idea (imagine a library with every possible book ever written) and surrounds that idea with superfluous details and then concludes. I imagine this review speaks more about my reading than the book's writing. With that general disclaimer, The Garden of ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
1 trivia question
See trivia...
to-read
(on 721 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 120 people's shelves)
fiction (on 99 people's shelves)
short-stories (on 61 people's shelves)
literature (on 24 people's shelves)
classics (on 19 people's shelves)
favorites (on 18 people's shelves)
1001-books (on 15 people's shelves)
1001 (on 15 people's shelves)
More shelves...
currently-reading (on 120 people's shelves)
fiction (on 99 people's shelves)
short-stories (on 61 people's shelves)
literature (on 24 people's shelves)
classics (on 19 people's shelves)
favorites (on 18 people's shelves)
1001-books (on 15 people's shelves)
1001 (on 15 people's shelves)
More shelves...































