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#1 | |||||||||||
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Mystic
![]() Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 158
Quotes: 0
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Robert Bolano on literature and exile
The Literary Saloon, a blog I recommend, has in its 14 January entry a link to a piece in The Nation which reprints a speech by Roberto Bolano on literature and exile. Bolano is an author I'd like to think many here would appreciate (and indeed expect many already do) and his speech is well worth reading: thoughtful, witty, oblique but also clear-headed. There is a hilarious, pointed discussion of the four greatest Chilean poets which mocks the entire question by nominating two, neither Chilean. And Bolano's take on nationality?: "I can say that my homeland consists of my son and my books."
I am hopeless at adding links but googling literary saloon will take you there or I guess go straight to The Nation's site. [Edit: I should have got the author's name right: Roberto Bolaņo] | |||||||||||
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Last edited by Sand; 01-17-2011 at 06:33 AM.. |
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| 4 Thanks From: |
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Grimscribe
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Re: Robert Bolano on literature and exile
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| 3 Thanks From: |
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#3 | |||||||||||
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Mannikin
![]() Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 5
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Re: Robert Bolano on literature and exile
There are similarities between Ligotti and Bolaņo. Specifically the manner in which they treat "evil." This subject is never, to my knowledge, explicitly handled but is given more of a periphery glimpse. Entirely different writing styles, though. Bolaņo being more rambling as opposed to Ligotti's conciseness.
Bolaņo is a writer I enjoy in doses, which goes for Ligotti as well. Whatever other adjective you would like to ascribe to it, it still has the quality of being dense. | |||||||||||
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| 2 Thanks From: | klarkash (03-23-2011), yellowish haze |
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#4 | |||||||||||
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Acolyte
![]() Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 98
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Re: Robert Bolano on literature and exile
Thanks for the link, Sand. Bolaņo's comment regarding his homeland is one of the most touching and true things I have read.
I am looking forward to the forthcoming book of his essays and speeches. I anticipate that it may reveal explicitly what I have only suspected up to now, that Bolaņo had many affinities with "our" literature. In the introduction to Antwerp he mentions having read Spinrad and James Tiptree Jr. (along with ancient Greek poetry and pornography); and the novel Monsieur Pain (which I have not yet read) seems to be set in something of a decacent milieu, and its story involves elements of occultism and Mesmerism. And he has written at least one ghost story, which ran in Harper's last year- I believe the title was The Return... | |||||||||||
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| Thanks From: | Derek John (03-23-2011) |
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| bolano, exile, literature, robert |
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