Ficciones (English Translation)
by Jorge Luis Borges
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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 ...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 ...more
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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, Author ...more
Not every story is perfection, but all are surprising, irritating, challenging and somehow rewarding. Standouts are "Pierre Menard, Author ...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
heads, thoughts, travelers, passions
Most striking about this book isn't the obvious skill at crafting stories; fluid, flawless prose; or even the "referance-to-neato-ideas" clause, but rather Borges's character's flexible and varied motivations. If one reads the stories from limitation of the point of view of any one of the Highschool Canons, it's a bit strange to realize that Borges writes none of these. Not unlike the character Pierre Menard, who becomes Cervantes and writes a few chapters of Don Quixote. As...more
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Read in August, 2007
An ingenious labyrinthine narrative...
Borges never fails to please, to challenge, to entertain, and more importantly make one's brain shift into high gear!
If you are looking for an easy read, don't expect to find it in Ficciones.
However, if you are looking for a little cerebral cortex arousal; grab this book and find a cozy spot...you won't be disappointed!
Reading with his head instead of his heart, Borges looks to fill his mind with all the minutia and informat...more
Borges never fails to please, to challenge, to entertain, and more importantly make one's brain shift into high gear!
If you are looking for an easy read, don't expect to find it in Ficciones.
However, if you are looking for a little cerebral cortex arousal; grab this book and find a cozy spot...you won't be disappointed!
Reading with his head instead of his heart, Borges looks to fill his mind with all the minutia and informat...more
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Read in May, 2008
Reading Borges was one of the strangest and mesmerising expierences of my life.
Borges uses many different styles in this book including commentaries on imaginary books, fantasies, murder mysteries and many stories purpose which does not become clear until the last paragraph.
Within these tales Borges covers many themes -- time, infinitude, mirrors, libraries, memory, language, insomnia but also duels, honour, and fate -- and for those with more philosophical and inquiring minds than mine ...more
Borges uses many different styles in this book including commentaries on imaginary books, fantasies, murder mysteries and many stories purpose which does not become clear until the last paragraph.
Within these tales Borges covers many themes -- time, infinitude, mirrors, libraries, memory, language, insomnia but also duels, honour, and fate -- and for those with more philosophical and inquiring minds than mine ...more
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Borges is (not dissimilar to Kafka, I think) more of a philosopher than a fiction writer, and he used fiction as a vessel to explore his ideas. The stories are often dense, and metaphorical, in that way, and those who would enjoy them would more than likely love them for the puzzles, thoughts, and expressions than for the stories themselves. This is, of course, only speaking to the English translation, and this one in particular. I've heard that reading Borges in original Espanol is something...more
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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
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
whoever is in to the absurd
Well, i don't really know what to say here, nor do I know why I am saying this, and even less then that do I understand to whom I am saying this, but I will continue nonetheless.
I am very fond of this book and I enjoy reading it very much. I don't think i can even begin to describe the book and I am certain i can't review it properly but i will just say that this book isn't for someone who needs a plot, main characters and diologues in his (or her) books. The Ideas brought up in this book are ...more
I am very fond of this book and I enjoy reading it very much. I don't think i can even begin to describe the book and I am certain i can't review it properly but i will just say that this book isn't for someone who needs a plot, main characters and diologues in his (or her) books. The Ideas brought up in this book are ...more
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Read in January, 1974
recommends it for:
any serious reader
The first time I read Borges I thought I had entered a parallel reality. Nobody writes like that and nobody has written like that since. He was one of a kind. If you enjoy highly intellectual literature that challenges and awes. this is for you. I could not presume to summarize what this collection of stories is like or to try to capture his essence in words. You just have to read it and then go on to read his other short stories collections and poetry. He never wrote novels because he was...more
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Read in June, 2008
Borges has the ability to render an entire world of knowledge in a simple seven or eight page short story. He needn't place every aspect of said world on the page, he succeeds in building a flawless skeleton which simply and beautifully elicits the complexities and the genius behind his works.
Ficciones is a short and superb collection of stories that drift through fantasy, philosophy, sociology/psychology/anthrophology, that demand rereading to peal away the many layers and subtexts. An exc...more
Ficciones is a short and superb collection of stories that drift through fantasy, philosophy, sociology/psychology/anthrophology, that demand rereading to peal away the many layers and subtexts. An exc...more
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Read in April, 1998
recommends it for:
anyone who thinks
This book introduced me to Borges and in turn many other authors of similar ilk. Ficciones is not only an assemblage of some of Borges' best fiction writing, but also an assemblage of his personal explorations for Truth. He refuses to throw out any line of reasoning solely on face value and not only acknowledges but embraces their many times contradictory natures on the premise that truth - ultimate truth - may in fact be an illusion or a fabrication by the intellect of man. This embrace of ...more
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I've noticed my reviews are a little valley girl-ish compared to others. I like totally love books! But seriously, I read this in a world lit class in college and thought it was great. I'd never even heard of Borges before that, but he is one terrific writer. Very unique. My favorite story in this collection is The Garden of Forking Paths. Someone else posted that you shouldn't let that story turn you off to Borges' work. I don't know how to take that (my favorite is the one stupid story ...more
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Read in March, 2007
Borges is supposed to be a surrealist wonder. I say leave surrealism for the painters my friend. I don't have time enough in my life to plow through and digest REAL, USEFUL theologies and philosophies that not only exist but also have meaning in my life...so what is the point of wading thru a fictional anthropological study of a people that were in fact INVENTED by others! This is the context of his first short story. Apparently, others shorts were much better. However, after the first two ...more
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
the crackhead outside shaws
This is a collection of short stories (really short stories) from the fantasy writer (used in the loosest way possible) from Argentina, Jorge Luis Borges. These stories are real mindfucks, about labyrinths, a library that goes on forever, time freezing at the moment of death, how Judas was more of a savior than Christ, and a society that bases its whole system on a lottery.
There are even literary criticisms of books that don't even exist. This guy is out there, but its a good read if you are...more
There are even literary criticisms of books that don't even exist. This guy is out there, but its a good read if you are...more
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bookshelves:
beauty,
death,
history,
literature,
soul
My first hands on with Borges... Absolutely amazing. So far beyond what I've been reading lately (mainly non-fiction and some late 20th century authors). As with Faulkner, I find it shocking that I was given an undergraduate degree in English without having read Borges. That simply should not be allowed.
Everything I was expecting and so much more. If, like me, you know Borges through his myth rather than his words, this is a fine place to start. And rest assured, the myths are nothing next to...more
Everything I was expecting and so much more. If, like me, you know Borges through his myth rather than his words, this is a fine place to start. And rest assured, the myths are nothing next to...more
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Read in January, 2005
Although some of the stories in this book are not especially memorable to me, particularly those in the second half of the book, the first half contains some truly incredible writing. In particular, "The Circular Ruins" and "The Library of Babel" are two of the most amazing works I've ever read; despite their brevity, I believe they contain more wisdom and insight than any full-length literary novel. If you read nothing else by Borges, read those two stories.
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Read in February, 2005
These stories are less like pearls, more like strange dense nuggets. I actually didn't like his fictions about fictions that much, but preferred the mystic stories of a man who made up a man, or even the story of the hive-like infinite library. I have the feeling you need an extraordinarily complete education to understand the stories very much at all, and I know I didn't always. (February 15, 2005)
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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.
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If you read a few select tales from Ficciones, it's possible that you won't recognize the Borges' true talent, save for the occasional wittiscism (and even many of these get lost in translation). But reading through several of the stories, a well as any of the other essays that he's written, one grows a deeper appreciation for Borges' haunting themes.
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Generally fabulous in both common senses, this collection of short stories around the "theme" of literature is mostly pleasurable and surprisingly romantic. "The Library of Babel" is justly famous, and "The Garden of Forking Paths" is brilliant. I didn't need the coda in "The Form Of The Sword" and "The South" borders on the formulaic. Great fun.
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