Niebla
This book was provided to me by NetGalley and Northwestern University Press. All opinions are my own. Pub Date 15 Aug 2017. New English translation. Book was first published in 1914 in Spanish.Reading this book is like looking at an Escher drawing, every now and then the brain skips a beat when it tries to catch up on the layers: the story in the story, the author addressing the reader, the MC meeting the author etc. All of these perspectives are loosely set around a tragic love story. Even
"'When you hear that a drama is full of action it means that the actors are indulging in a host of gestures, performing mighty deeds, fighting stage duels, skipping about and pantomime! Pantomime! Or you may hear that there is too much talk in the play. As if talk were not action! In the beginning was the Word, and by the Word all things were made. Suppose, for example, that some some 'nivolist' were hiding here now, back of that wardrobe, and taking stenographic notes of all that we are
I am surprised this novel is not better known outside Spain. Or may be I am not.Niebla, or Mist, was published in 1914 but it was written considerably earlier, in 1907. Consequently, it ranks amongst the earliest modernist novels, on a par with Pirandellos Il fu Mattia Pascal (from 1904 and which I have not read - yet) and with Prousts Du côté de chez Swann (published in 1913 but also written from 1909 onwards).Don Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1939) is associated to what is known as the 98 Generation
Such an amazing book. Metafiction at its finest.
1914. Politically unsettling times at the onset of The Great War. Fragmentation in the world and a tendency to see through a glass darkly perhaps was the inspiration for "Fog" written by Miguel de Unamuno.Augusto, a pampered, wealthy intellectual, still reeling two years after his mother's death, was bored with life. Bored, until the day he spotted a girl with beautiful eyes. He followed her home and gleaned the necessary information. She was single, orphaned, and lived with her aunt and uncle.
What a peculiar little book! I read it about five years ago and find it way easier to understand this second time. It's very philosophical, full of musings and monologues and, may I say, free association. Some of the subjects mentioned are love, death, divinity, existence and reality. The author shakes and eventually smashes the fourth wall, providing strong arguments about reality and fiction, sanity and madness, clarity and mist.
Miguel de Unamuno
Paperback | Pages: 259 pages Rating: 4.05 | 10897 Users | 630 Reviews
Particularize Books During Niebla
Original Title: | Niebla |
ISBN: | 8423919153 (ISBN13: 9788423919154) |
Edition Language: | Spanish |
Narration Supposing Books Niebla
Esta obra de Miguel de Unamuno es uno de los ejemplos clĂ¡sicos mĂ¡s eminentes de la novela moderna. La ficciĂ³n deja aquĂ de ser un puro vehĂculo narrativo, transmisor de historias, para convertirse en un universo textual de fecundas sugerencias. El tĂtulo, Niebla, expresa con claridad el propĂ³sito novelesco de desdibujar lo visible y materializar, en cambio, lo impalpable. En este ambiente vemos moverse a un hombre esencialmente frustrado, Augusto PĂ©rez, sobre cuya muerte nos vemos obligados a pronunciarnos. GermĂ¡n GullĂ³n, reconocido como uno de los primeros especialistas en novela contemporĂ¡nea, facilita en esta ediciĂ³n una pauta de lectura que conduce a una riqueza de comprensiĂ³n insospechada de la novela en sĂ y de cuanto supone, como cima, en el proceso de la narrativa española.Specify Based On Books Niebla
Title | : | Niebla |
Author | : | Miguel de Unamuno |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | ColecciĂ³n Austral |
Pages | : | Pages: 259 pages |
Published | : | January 1st 1990 by Elliot's Books (first published 1914) |
Categories | : | Fiction. European Literature. Spanish Literature. Classics. Cultural. Spain |
Rating Based On Books Niebla
Ratings: 4.05 From 10897 Users | 630 ReviewsPiece Based On Books Niebla
This book was provided to me by NetGalley and Northwestern University Press. All opinions are my own. Pub Date 15 Aug 2017. New English translation. Book was first published in 1914 in Spanish.Reading this book is like looking at an Escher drawing, every now and then the brain skips a beat when it tries to catch up on the layers: the story in the story, the author addressing the reader, the MC meeting the author etc. All of these perspectives are loosely set around a tragic love story. Even
"'When you hear that a drama is full of action it means that the actors are indulging in a host of gestures, performing mighty deeds, fighting stage duels, skipping about and pantomime! Pantomime! Or you may hear that there is too much talk in the play. As if talk were not action! In the beginning was the Word, and by the Word all things were made. Suppose, for example, that some some 'nivolist' were hiding here now, back of that wardrobe, and taking stenographic notes of all that we are
I am surprised this novel is not better known outside Spain. Or may be I am not.Niebla, or Mist, was published in 1914 but it was written considerably earlier, in 1907. Consequently, it ranks amongst the earliest modernist novels, on a par with Pirandellos Il fu Mattia Pascal (from 1904 and which I have not read - yet) and with Prousts Du côté de chez Swann (published in 1913 but also written from 1909 onwards).Don Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1939) is associated to what is known as the 98 Generation
Such an amazing book. Metafiction at its finest.
1914. Politically unsettling times at the onset of The Great War. Fragmentation in the world and a tendency to see through a glass darkly perhaps was the inspiration for "Fog" written by Miguel de Unamuno.Augusto, a pampered, wealthy intellectual, still reeling two years after his mother's death, was bored with life. Bored, until the day he spotted a girl with beautiful eyes. He followed her home and gleaned the necessary information. She was single, orphaned, and lived with her aunt and uncle.
What a peculiar little book! I read it about five years ago and find it way easier to understand this second time. It's very philosophical, full of musings and monologues and, may I say, free association. Some of the subjects mentioned are love, death, divinity, existence and reality. The author shakes and eventually smashes the fourth wall, providing strong arguments about reality and fiction, sanity and madness, clarity and mist.
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