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Home > Media Detail

Paul Auster: 1,001 Laughs
Paul Auster: 1,001 Laughs

Back in the thirties, Borges worked for an Argentinean women's magazine called El Hogar--a magazine of middle-class attitudes and presumptions, roughly similar to Redbook in America today. I hadn't known about these pieces until a few days ago, when I started reading Selected Non-Fictions, the wonderful volume that Viking has published. Borges's prose is nutty and funny and unexpected at almost every turn. Here's an example, from a portrait of Theodore Dreiser, the American writer:



Dreiser's head is an arduous, monumental head, geological in character, a head of the afflicted Prometheus bound to the Caucasus, and which, across the inexorable centuries, has become ingrained with the Caucasus and now has a fundamental component of rock that is pained by life. Dreiser's work is no different from his tragic face: it is as torpid as the mountains or the deserts, but like them it is important in an elemental and inarticulate way....


(Translated by Esther Allen)


 


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