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Julio Cortázar

Book - 2016

"World renowned as one of the masters of contemporary fiction, Julio Cortazar was also a prolific poet, who in his final months in Paris, ill with leukemia, assembled what he wanted saved of his life's work in verse. This expanded edition of Save Twilight, offers a bilingual survey of Cortazar's enduring poetry ranging through his various voices, moods, and styles"--

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861.64/Cortazar
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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
San Francisco : City Lights Books [2016]
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Julio Cortázar (author, -)
Other Authors
Stephen Kessler, 1947- (translator)
Edition
Second edition
Item Description
"Originally published as Salvo el crepúsculo by Editorial Nueva Imagen, S.A., Mexico City, 1984" -- Title page verso.
Physical Description
xvii, 257 pages ; 16 cm
ISBN
9780872867093
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Argentine writer and translator Cortázar (1914-1984), best known for his inventive fiction, beguiles in this expanded bilingual second edition of his poems. Cortázar, espousing the notion that "poetry and prose reciprocally empower each other," constructs hybrid "prosems" or "peoms" that contend with love and loss, nationalistic ambivalence, literary theory, and memory. Something of a lovable crank, he declares listening to headphones "stupid and alienating" and a "psychological prison" in a lyrical essay ostensibly in favor of them, and heaps inexplicable scorn on knitters and Notre Dame Cathedral. Cortázar pithily laments his own squareness-"I accept this destiny of ironed shirts"-and the aging process, during which time is "a truckload of rocks/ dumped on your back, puking/ its insufferable weight." A political expatriate to Paris, Cortázar footnotes one poem praising Argentina with an ominous implication of state-sanctioned murder, while elsewhere he fondly recalls "wisps of smoke/ gracefully streaming from the peanut vendors' carts" in the Plaza de Mayo. Cortázar's verse is more traditional than his fiction, but his style and themes are in harmony across genres: eccentric, mystical, full of animals but deeply human. Cortázar is a people's poet, accessible from every angle, and his position as a titan of the Latin American boom is indisputable. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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