“Ursula K Le Guin acclaims the wise comedy of José Saramago”

Ursula K Le Guin has reviewed José Saramago's The Elephant's Journey for the Guardian. Saramago, who died June 18th aged 87, was known not only for his superb fiction, of which The Elephant's Journey will now be the last example, but also for his frank and outspoken politics. The Notebook, published by Verso just two months before Saramago's death, is a collection of his non-fiction writing that exhibits a sharp and relentless political mind at work.

In her review, Le Guin, too, is quick to acknowledge Saramago as a political being:

His preoccupations and politics and passions might seem to belong to a past age: a diehard communist impatient of dictators, subversive of orthodoxies, disrespectful of international corporations, peasant-born in a marginal country and identifying himself always with the powerless, a radical who lived on into an age when even liberals are spoken of as leftist ... But the still more intransigent radicalism of his art makes it impossible to dismiss him from the busy chatrooms of the present.

Visit the Guardian to read the review in full.

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J. M. Ledgard, an Economist correspondent, reviewed The Elephant's Journey in yesterday's http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/books/review/Ledgard-t.html. The reviewer overcame his ideological proclivities and gave the novel a thumbs up:

"The Portuguese writer José Saramago died in June at the age of 87. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1998, having peaked as a writer later in life. His prose is impish and subtle enough to bear comparison with Italo Calvino
and Georges Perec, even if he lacked their scope. Saramago was a
Communist. He believed there was a new totalitarianism of multinational
companies. “To be a Portuguese Stalinist” well into the 21st century
“means you’re simply not living in the real world,” the critic Harold Bloom has said. True enough. Yet when Saramago picked up his pen, a richer world was made."

The rest is at: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/books/review/Ledgard-t.html
Tom Mertes / 20 September 2010

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