蘑菇传媒

logo

Where Have I Been These Past Few Months

That I didn’t realize Not terribly active, but still, today’s post about is pretty interesting. To provide some context for this quote: earlier in the summer ND held a contest to see if anyone could identify the first publication of Borges by ND. Answer: Two stories (鈥淚nvestigations on the Death of Herbert Quian鈥 and 鈥淭he Circular Ruins鈥) appeared in New Directions in Prose and Poetry 11. And here’s a bit more info from translator Donald Yates:

鈥淭his early appearance of Borges鈥檚 fiction was the result of James Laughlin鈥檚 recognition of Borges鈥檚 importance, and no doubt influenced his decision to offer a contract when the manuscript of Labyrinths came across his desk 鈥 after it had been rejected by other publishers, including Barney Rosset at Grove Press, who immediately rushed ahead with a translation 鈥 by Anthony Kerrigan, et al., 鈥 of Borges鈥檚 Ficciones 鈥 immediately after Borges shared with Samuel Beckett the First International Editors in 1961.

鈥淚n a sense, I think it helped in Borges鈥 critical reception here. A lot of reviewers sat up and paid attention when two Borges collections came across their desk and often (New York Times, e.g.) both were reviewed together. If I had it all to do over again, since we had access to all of Borges鈥檚 prose published through 1960, I would have also included `El sur,鈥 `El aleph.鈥 and as you point out, `Herbert Quain.鈥欌

鈥淚 was properly scolded by my friend Anthony Boucher, who reviewed mystery fiction for the NYTBR, for leaving out that story that touched on a subject close to both our hearts 鈥 detective literature. He, by the way, did the first translation ever of a Borges tale in English: `The Garden of Forking Paths,鈥 which appeared in the August, 1948, issue of Ellery Queen鈥檚 Mystery Magazine. In early 1963, Time magazine selected Labyrinths as one of the top ten fiction titles published in 1962. And in 2008 The Authors Society of London named Labyrinths as one of 50 outstanding English-language translations of the previous 50 years.鈥 鈥揇onald Yates

Hopefully ND keeps this up. That place must be a treasure trove of interesting literary anecdotes.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.