And Other Stories Spanish-Language Reading Group discussion
Opendoor - Iosi Havilio
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People, I picked it up yesterday and it provided a bubble to escape into on the tube-strike-day-from-hell on buses round London.
It's very gentle, very beautiful, it doesn't show off at all. Can't wait to read more tonight. Let me know if you'd like to read it.
I think what Rachael wrote about it at the bottom of the page on Havilio on our own website captures it well:
http://www.andotherstories.org/iosi-h...

It's a gem. I'd even dare to say once more that overused and abused word: 'beautiful'.
Maybe the book has something to do with the whole 'slow movement' that crops up in all areas, eg the 'mumblecore' films coming out in the States. There was an interesting article on slow films in Prospect magazine this summer, only online in full for subscribers, but no doubt in a library:
http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/201...
I liked the article's point about being sympathetic watchers (taking the film on its terms, leaving expectations behind). Mark Cousins also says (if I remember rightly) that he's a really quite hyper person, and so he finds immersion in these more gentle films completely refreshing. Well.. that might be just a little part of the picture for Opendoor I suppose.
Anyone willing to share their thoughts on the book?


Open Door actually exists, too, a village named after the psychiatric institution set up there in the early part of last century.
Is there anyone else out there who's read it?
Opendoor (the name of an open psychiatric institution, but that's not exactly what the novel's about, just one of its fairly disparate elements) is an enigmatic book. Don't read it if you like a tight plot, or any plot at all. It has a weird atmosphere all of its own and a moral relativism (I think) which is either refreshing or an avoidance, I can't decide. It sort of washes over you. Read it on a long journey.