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Poesias (Hardcover)
MacHado De Assis
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R1,533
Discovery Miles 15 330
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A revelatory new translation of the playful, incomparable
masterpiece of one of the greatest Black authors in the Americas
Machado de Assis is not only Brazil's most celebrated writer but
also a writer of world stature. In his masterpiece, the 1881 novel
The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas (also translated as Epitaph of
a Small Winner), the ghost of a decadent and disagreeable
aristocrat decides to write his memoir. He dedicates it to the
worms gnawing at his corpse and tells of his failed romances and
half-hearted political ambitions, serves up hare-brained
philosophies and complains with gusto from the depths of his grave.
Wildly imaginative, wickedly witty and ahead of its time, the novel
has been compared to works by Cervantes, Sterne, Joyce, Nabokov,
Borges and Calvino, and has influenced generations of writers
around the world.
Machado de Assis is one of the most enigmatic and fascinating story
writers who ever lived. What seem at first to be stately social
satires reveal unanticipated depths through hints of darkness and
winking surrealism. This new selection of his finest work,
translated by the prize-winning Daniel Hahn, showcases the many
facets of his mercurial genius. A brilliant scientist opens the
first asylum in his home town, only to start finding signs of
insanity all around him. A young lieutenant basks in praise of his
new position, but in solitude feels his identity fray into nothing.
The reading of a much-loved, respected elder statesman's journals
reveals hidden thoughts of merciless cruelty.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
"I passed away at two o'clock in the afternoon on a Friday in
August in 1869, in my beautiful mansion in the Catumbi district of
the city." So begins Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas-at the end of
the narrator's life. Published in 1881, this highly experimental
novel was not at first considered Machado de Assis' definitive
work-a fact his narrator anticipated, bidding "good riddance" to
the critic looking for a "run-of-the-mill-novel". Yet in this
coruscating new translation, Margaret Jull Costa and Robin
Patterson reveal a pivotal moment in Machado's career, as his
flights of the surreal became his literary hallmark. An enigmatic,
amusing and frequently insufferable anti hero, Bras Cubas describes
his Rio de Janeiro childhood spent tormenting household slaves, his
bachelor years of torrid affairs and his final days obsessing over
nonsensical poultices. A novel that helped launch modernist
fiction, Bras Cubas shines a direct light to Ulysses and Love in
the Time of Cholera.
'I am a deceased writer not in the sense of one who has written and
is now deceased, but in the sense of one who has died and is now
writing'. So begins the posthumous memoir of Braz Cubas, a wealthy
nineteenth-century Brazilian. While the grave may have given Cubas
the distance to examine his rather undistinguished life, it has
certainly not dampened his sense of humour. Epitaph of a Small
Winner is one of the wittiest self-portraits in literary history.
In these memoirs, Braz Cubas, a wealthy nineteenth-century
Brazilian, examines (from beyond the grave) his rather
undistinguished life in 160 short chapters that are filled with
philosophical digressions and exuberant insights. A clear
forerunner of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Jorge Luis Borges,
"Epitaph for a Small Winner," first published in 1880, is one of
the wittiest self-portraits in literary history as well as "one of
the masterpieces of Brazilian literature" (Salman Rushdie).
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