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Quarterly Conversation: Issue 13

The new issue of is now online, and, as can be expected, filled with great stuff.

One of the lead pieces is Scott Esposito’s article about the similarities in the writings of

In his Prologue [to The Invention of Morel, Borges calls on writers of the 20th century to prove that 鈥渋f [the literature of] this century has any ascendancy over the preceding ones it lies in the quality of its plots.鈥 Kafka and Bioy are two writers who responded to, and perhaps proved, Borges鈥檚 declaration. For all the differences in their lives, contexts, and ways of meeting Borges鈥檚 challenge, their fictions exhibit remarkable convergences. So clear are the similarities that one might follow William H. Gass, who once declared 鈥渢hat Schopenhauer has read Borges and reflects him, just as Borges reflects both Bioy and Borges.鈥 If Schopenhauer can read Borges, then Kafka has clearly read Bioy, and the two reflect each other like two mirrors, except what鈥檚 multiplied in their midst isn鈥檛 a person but a world: our very own, skewed as images caught between mirrors tend to be, but seemingly contained in both at once and, as the reproductions trail off to infinity, slightly but clearly bending in the same direction.

There are also a number of reviews of interesting titles, including pieces on by Breyten Breytenbach, on by Camilo Jose Cela, and by Stefan Zweig, which has a great opening paragraph:

Reading The Post-Office Girl is like trying to hit a slow-breaking curveball. You know the break is coming鈥攜ou can intuit that the seemingly conventional story is going to drop on you in some way鈥攂ut it hangs high for so long that by the time it does break, you鈥檝e already swung blindly, thinking you knew how to read the book.

There are also reviews of by Horacio Castellanos Moya—one of my favorite books of 2008, which Scott Bryan Wilson also praises:

ike a lot of the great Central American novelists, Moya started out with aspirations of becoming a poet, and though Senselessness is full of really miserable, gruesome stuff, it鈥檚 exactly the ugliness, as well as Moya鈥檚 sense of language, compassion, and his healthy dose of pessimism), that make Senselessness a phenomenal read and an incredibly important work.

And finally, there’s an interesting review of by Muhammad Khudayyir:

Muhammad Khudayyir鈥檚 Basrayatha has no need for maps. Although the book is tagged as a travel memoir, it has little to offer the would-be (if-it-were-possible) tourist to Iraq. The narrative doesn鈥檛 pause to orient the reader鈥攖o remove our blindfolds and point us in a particular direction鈥攁nd most of its landmarks are erased and rebuilt, renamed, and then erased and rebuilt again. The book鈥檚 only visual guides are not maps but slightly blurred, century-old photographs. These uncaptioned photos, like the images of a W. G. Sebald novel, obscure as much as they illuminate.

But just as Khudayyir does not present us with the pseudo-clarity of a CNN report, neither does he bring us a fuzzy, pre-invasion paradise. Basrayatha is nearer kin to Calvino鈥檚 Invisible Cities and Sebald鈥檚 Rings of Saturn. Khudayyir takes us into a story-reflecting-a-city, a series of memories and mirrors that point us toward what the book鈥檚 narrator calls 鈥渁ctual, defective reality.鈥 This is not because Khudayyir has fled the land of his birth and must construct things, board by board, from faded recollections. He names himself a permanent citizen of Basra, and says that he has rarely left the city in forty-some years, his age when the book was published in Arabic in 1996.

In addition to all of these great articles, there are also interviews with and

Overall, a great issue.



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