欧宝娱乐

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袗屑械褉懈泻邪薪褋泻懈 谢械泻褑懈懈

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袩褉械蟹 褞薪懈 1984 谐. 袠褌邪谢芯 袣邪谢胁懈薪芯 械 芯褎懈褑懈邪谢薪芯 锌芯泻邪薪械薪 芯褌 啸邪褉胁邪褉写褋泻懈褟 褍薪懈胁械褉褋懈褌械褌 蟹邪 谢械泻褑懈芯薪薪邪褌邪 锌芯褉械写懈褑邪 "效邪褉谢蟹 袝谢懈褗褌 袧芯褉褌褗薪". 小褌邪胁邪 胁褗锌褉芯褋 蟹邪 褑懈泻褗谢 芯褌 褕械褋褌 谢械泻褑懈懈, 泻芯懈褌芯 褋械 懈蟹薪邪褋褟褌 胁 褉邪屑泻懈褌械 薪邪 械写薪邪 邪泻邪写械屑懈褔薪邪 谐芯写懈薪邪 (蟹邪 袣邪谢胁懈薪芯 褌芯胁邪 褌褉褟斜胁邪 写邪 斜褗写械 1985/1986). 孝褉邪写懈褑懈褟褌邪 薪邪 袧芯褉褌褗薪芯胁懈褌械 谢械泻褑懈懈 蟹邪锌芯褔胁邪 芯褌 1926 谐. 懈 锌褉械写懈 袣邪谢胁懈薪芯 蟹邪 褌褟褏 褋邪 泻邪薪械薪懈 褌胁芯褉褑懈 芯褌 锌芯褉褟写褗泻邪 薪邪 孝. 小. 袝谢懈褗褌, 袠谐芯褉 小褌褉邪胁懈薪褋泻懈, 啸芯褉褏械 袥褍懈褋 袘芯褉褏械褋, 袧芯褉褌褉褗锌 肖褉邪泄, 袨泻褌邪胁懈芯 袩邪褋.

袟邪 锌褗褉胁懈 锌褗褌 褋械 锌褉械写谢邪谐邪 褍褔邪褋褌懈械 薪邪 懈褌邪谢懈邪薪褋泻懈 锌懈褋邪褌械谢 懈 懈写械褟褌邪 械 褌芯泄 写邪 锌褉械写褋褌邪胁懈 蟹邪薪懈屑邪薪懈褟褌邪 褋懈 锌芯 胁褗蟹屑芯卸薪芯 薪邪泄-泻芯薪褑械薪褌褉懈褉邪薪懈褟 懈 泻褉邪褋薪芯褉械褔懈胁 薪邪褔懈薪 锌褉械写 褋褌褍写械薪褌懈褌械.
袣邪谢胁懈薪芯 褋械 蟹邪械屑邪 写邪 锌懈褕械 "褕械褋褌 锌褉械写谢芯卸械薪懈褟 蟹邪 褋谢械写胁邪褖芯褌芯 褏懈谢褟写芯谢械褌懈械": "薪褟泻芯懈 写芯褋褌芯泄薪褋褌胁邪, 泻邪褔械褋褌胁邪 懈谢懈 褏邪褉邪泻褌械褉薪懈 褔械褉褌懈 薪邪 谢懈褌械褉邪褌褍褉邪褌邪, 泻芯懈褌芯 褋邪 屑懈 芯褋芯斜械薪芯 褋泻褗锌懈, 胁 锌械褉褋锌械泻褌懈胁邪褌邪 薪邪 薪芯胁芯褌芯 褏懈谢褟写芯谢械褌懈械".

袩芯褔懈胁邪 芯褌 懈薪褋褍谢褌 锌褉械蟹 褋械锌褌械屑褉懈 1985 谐., 褌芯褔薪芯 锌褉械写懈 谐芯褋褌褍胁邪薪械褌芯 褋懈 胁 啸邪褉胁邪褉写 懈 锌褉械写懈 写邪 械 薪邪锌懈褋邪谢 褕械褋褌邪褌邪 谢械泻褑懈褟, "小褗写褗褉卸邪褌械谢薪芯褋褌". 袠褌邪谢懈邪薪褋泻芯褌芯 蟹邪谐谢邪胁懈械 薪邪 泻薪懈谐邪褌邪 械 懈蟹斜褉邪薪芯 芯褌 卸械薪邪 屑褍, 袝褋褌械褉 袣邪谢胁懈薪芯, 邪 锌械褌褌械 谐芯褌芯胁懈 谢械泻褑懈懈 - "袥械泻芯褌邪", "袘褗褉蟹懈薪邪", "孝芯褔薪芯褋褌", "袧邪谐谢械写薪芯褋褌" 懈 "袦薪芯卸械褋褌胁械薪芯褋褌", - 褋褗斜褉邪薪懈 胁 褌芯胁邪 褌芯屑褔械, 褋邪 懈蟹写邪写械薪懈 锌芯褋屑褗褉褌薪芯 锌褉械蟹 1988-邪 懈 锌褉械写褋褌邪胁谢褟胁邪褌 械写薪邪 芯褌 薪邪泄-褌邪谢邪薪褌谢懈胁懈褌械, 锌褉芯褔褍胁褋褌胁械薪懈 懈 邪褉谐褍屑械薪褌懈褉邪薪懈 蟹邪褖懈褌懈 薪邪 褏褍写芯卸械褋褌胁械薪邪褌邪 谢懈褌械褉邪褌褍褉邪.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1988

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About the author

Italo Calvino

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Italo Calvino was born in Cuba and grew up in Italy. He was a journalist and writer of short stories and novels. His best known works include the Our Ancestors trilogy (1952-1959), the Cosmicomics collection of short stories (1965), and the novels Invisible Cities (1972) and If On a Winter's Night a Traveler (1979).

His style is not easy to classify; much of his writing has an air reminiscent to that of fantastical fairy tales (Our Ancestors, Cosmicomics), although sometimes his writing is more "realistic" and in the scenic mode of observation (Difficult Loves, for example). Some of his writing has been called postmodern, reflecting on literature and the act of reading, while some has been labeled magical realist, others fables, others simply "modern". He wrote: "My working method has more often than not involved the subtraction of weight. I have tried to remove weight, sometimes from people, sometimes from heavenly bodies, sometimes from cities; above all I have tried to remove weight from the structure of stories and from language."

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Profile Image for Orsodimondo.
2,388 reviews2,344 followers
November 8, 2020
L鈥橝NIMA DELLE PAROLE


Plinio Nomellini: Prime letture (1906). Galleria d鈥橝rte Moderna, Milano.

Sei lezioni preparate e mai tenute perch茅 Calvino mor矛 prima di partire per Harvard (settembre 1985). Pubblicate postume, prima in inglese e solo dopo in italiano, con l鈥檜ltima, Coerenza, incompleta.
Un grande riconoscimento per lo scrittore italiano: queste Poetry Lectures hanno inanellato ospiti davvero illustri (T.S. Eliot, Jorge Luis Borges, Robert frost, Igor Stravinsky, Thornton Wilder, Octavio Paz, Northrop Frye...)
Per come sono andate le cose, diventano in pratica il testamento letterario di Calvino.


Silvestro Lega: La lettura (1864 鈥� 1867). Pinacoteca Corrado Giaquinto, Bari.

La letteratura, e il mondo, si stavano avvicinando a un traguardo importante: un nuovo millennio. Un momento che Calvino sentiva particolarmente visto che il titolo originale fa riferimento proprio a questo: sei memo/proposte per il nuovo millennio.
Ogni lezione prende spunto da un aspetto qualitativo che la scrittura ha e dovrebbe avere: quelle qualit脿 che sono necessarie per fare letteratura.
E che 猫 bene, e importante, conservare e continuare nel terzo millennio. Consigli per gli scrittori di domani.

Leggerezza, Rapidit脿, Esattezza, Visibilit脿, 惭辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿, e Coerenza.
L鈥檃ssunto complessivo in estrema sintesi potrebbe essere che leggere 猫 attivit脿 curativa per arginare il 鈥渕ale di vivere鈥�. Forse perch茅 鈥渟ulla carta鈥�, leggendo viviamo altre vite.


Gerard ter Boch: Donna che scrive una lettera (1655 circa). Mauritshuis, L鈥橝ia, Olanda.

La mia 鈥榣ezione鈥� preferita 猫 la prima, probabilmente perch茅 il titolo fa riferimento a una qualit脿 che trovo meravigliosa, la leggerezza. Che per Calvino non andava confusa con la superficialit脿 - la quale al contrario finiva nella categoria della pesantezza - ma si identificava piuttosto con l鈥檈sattezza, lo spessore, la profondit脿.

Avrei anche potuto scrivere che si tratta di libro 鈥渋n lettura鈥� perch茅 lo si legge e rilegge e consulta, senza abbandonarlo mai.


Jan Vermeer: Donna che scrive una lettera alla presenza della domestica (1671 circa). National Gallery of Ireland, Dublino.
Profile Image for Riku Sayuj.
658 reviews7,545 followers
March 23, 2015

This is a series of lectures and in each of them Calvino takes it upon himself to recommend to the next millennium a particular literary value which he holds dear, and has tried to embody in his work. That way this book becomes not only a manifesto on how to write but also a guide to interpreting Calvino鈥檚 writings.

1) Lightness: not frivolity but a lightness of touch that allows the writer and reader to soar above the paralyzing heaviness of the world.
2) Quickness: the mental speed of the narrative 鈥� he takes the rapid trot of a folktale as his model here. The narrative should pull the reader along and not get mired up in questioning the non-essential parts.
3) Exactitude: the novel should be perfectly proportioned. Calvino says his guiding image when composing a literary work is the crystal 鈥� the magnificent complexity of it and the fact that it can be held in one hand and admired despite all that complexity. The only way to capture life might be to crystalize it with rigid rules?
4) Visibility: or the visual nature of the literary work is all important. For Calvino, every story begins as a visual cue, to which more and more images are added until he has to summon words to describe this profusion of images. He worries about what will happen to the originality of the visual imagination in a world supersaturated by external images.
5) Multiplicity: a literary work should try to encompass the whole known world. It should be ambitious beyond measure. Without unachievable ambition among its practitioners, literature cannot survive long. So Calvino exhorts us to soar beyond the most distant horizons we can conceive of and then to look down and see everything and then write everything. This section is a paean to the encyclopedic novel.
And lastly,
6) Incompleteness: a good novel would be incomplete, just like this list. No one could locate the last memo.
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,562 reviews12 followers
August 4, 2020
Lezioni americane: sei proposte per il prossimo millennio = Six Memos for the Next Millennium, Italo Calvino

Six Memos for the Next Millennium is a book based on a series of lectures written by Italo Calvino for the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard, but never delivered as Calvino died before leaving Italy.

The lectures were originally written in Italian and translated by Patrick Creagh. The lectures were to be given in the fall of 1985, and Memos was published in 1988. The memos are lectures on the values of literature that Calvino felt were important for the coming millennium. At the time of his death Calvino had finished all but the last lecture.

The Memos: The values which Calvino highlights are: 1 - Lightness; 2 - Quickness; 3 - Exactitude; 4 - Visibility; 5 - Multiplicity; All that is known of the sixth lecture is that it was to be on consistency.

鬲丕乇蹖禺 賳禺爻鬲蹖賳 禺賵丕賳卮: 乇賵夭 亘蹖爻鬲 賵 倬賳噩賲 賲丕賴 丌賵乇蹖賱 爻丕賱 2009 賲蹖賱丕丿蹖

毓賳賵丕賳: 卮卮 蹖丕丿丿丕卮鬲 亘乇丕蹖 賴夭丕乇賴 蹖 亘毓丿蹖貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 丕蹖鬲丕賱賵 讴丕賱賵蹖賳賵貨 賲鬲乇噩賲 賱蹖賱蹖 诏賱爻鬲丕賳貨 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賲丕賴蹖貙 1387貨 丿乇 160氐貨 卮丕亘讴 9789642090139貨 趩丕倬 丿蹖诏乇: 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賳卮乇 賲乇讴夭貙 1394貨 丿乇 卮卮 賵 140氐貨 卮丕亘讴 9789642132683貨 賲賵囟賵毓 鬲丕乇蹖禺 賵 賳賯丿 丕丿亘蹖丕鬲 丕夭 賳賵蹖爻賳丿诏丕賳 丕蹖鬲丕賱蹖丕卅蹖 - 爻丿賴 20賲

毓賳丕賵蹖賳 蹖丕丿丿丕卮鬲賴丕: 爻亘讴蹖貙 爻乇毓鬲貙 丿賯鬲貙 賵囟賵丨貙 趩賳丿诏丕賳诏蹖貙 賵 卮卮賲蹖賳 诏賮鬲丕乇 芦爻丕夭诏丕乇蹖禄 賳丕賲 丿丕卮鬲賴貙 芦丕蹖鬲丕賱賵 讴丕賱賵蹖賳賵禄 诏賵蹖丕 蹖丕丿丿丕卮鬲賴丕 乇丕 亘乇丕蹖 丕蹖乇丕丿 爻禺賳乇丕賳蹖 丿乇 丿丕賳卮诏丕賴 芦賴丕乇賵丕乇丿禄 丌賲丕丿賴 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿賳丿貙 丕賲丕 丿乇爻鬲 卮亘 倬蹖卮 丕夭 倬乇賵丕夭 亘乇丕蹖 爻禺賳乇丕賳蹖貙 亘乇 丕孬乇 爻賰鬲賴 丕夭 丿乇亘 丕蹖賳 丿賳蹖丕 亘诏匕卮鬲賳丿

鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 13/05/1399賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for Valeriu Gherghel.
Author听6 books1,970 followers
May 3, 2023
Italo Calvino a fost invitat 卯n 1985 s膬 葲in膬 6 conferin葲e 卯n cadrul Norton Lectures (Harvard University). A apucat s膬 redacteze doar 5. A murit subit, 卯n 19 octombrie 1985, 卯nainte de a le prezenta studen葲ilor.

Str膬b膬t卯nd conferin葲ele (completate cu o a 葯asea despre 鈥瀒ncipit鈥� - paragraful de deschidere al unui roman -, r膬mas膬 dintr-un alt manuscris) am reg膬sit obsesiile ideologice ale timpului (anii 70-80 ai secolului 20):

1. Totalitatea este un concept f膬r膬 con葲inut, exist膬 doar pluralit膬葲i ne卯ncheiate, colec葲ii heteroclite de indivizi.
2. Nu exist膬 ierarhii, ci numai re葲ele conceptuale / intelectuale (ideea de rizom a lui Deleuze-Guattari).
3. Preferabil e s膬 scrii fragmentar (idee mult comentat膬 de Roland Barthes), scrisul continuu / sistematic ofer膬 o imagine eronat膬, artificial膬 despre lume 葯i g卯ndire. Lumea nu este o mul葲ime finit膬.
4. Crea葲ia este o 鈥瀉rs combinatoria鈥�, un proces computa葲ional - Georges Perec ar fi prozatorul care ilustreaz膬 cel mai bine aceast膬 concep葲ie, 卯n Via葲a. Mod de 卯ntrebuin葲are.
5. C卯nd scrii un roman, nu exist膬 inspira葲ie 葯i nici spontaneitate: totul porne葯te de la un concept abstract.
6. Romanul clasic a murit, nu ne r膬m卯ne dec卯t s膬 ridic膬m edificii textuale c卯t mai ingenioase etc.

Dintre cele 6 conferin葲e, o prefer pe cea despre 鈥瀝apiditatea鈥� narativ膬 葯i, 卯n plus, eseul despre 鈥瀒ncipit鈥�, care a avut ini葲ial o alt膬 destina葲ie. Italo Calvino 卯葯i construie葯te discursul dup膬 un model analogic, al simpatiei (葯i mai pu葲in logic, argumentativ). 脦葯i propune astfel s膬 discute despre lejeritate 葯i firul analogiei 卯l conduce de la un pasaj din Ovidiu la c卯teva versuri de Montale, de la Milan Kundera la mesajele ADN, de la poemul De rerum natura al lui Lucre葲iu la o povestire (VI: 9) din Decameronul lui Boccaccio, de la un vers din Divina commedia la un citat din Paul Val茅ry (鈥濼rebuie s膬 fii u葯or ca pas膬rea, 葯i nu ca pana鈥�), iar de la acesta la un poem de Emily Dickinson:

A sepal, petal, and a thorn
Upon a common summer's morn -
A flask or Dew - a Bee or two -
A Breeze - a caper in the trees -
And I'm a Rose! (pp.63-64).

Dar Emily Dickinson nu este termenul ultim al derivei analogice, inspira葲ia 葯i av卯ntul 卯l 卯mping pe Italo Calvino s膬 dea un citat din Henry James (cred c膬 este din Fiara din jungl膬, de葯i autorul nu precizeaz膬 de unde l-a luat), apoi s膬 sar膬 la Shakespeare (Romeo 葯i Julieta), apoi la Cyrano de Bergerac, care ar fi 鈥瀙rimul poet al atomismului鈥� (p.69), apoi la poe葲ii Lunii 葯. a. m. d.

Se 卯ntreab膬 el 卯nsu葯i pe la mijlocul conferin葲ei: 鈥濻膬 se fi 卯mpletit prea multe fire 卯n discursul meu?鈥� (r膬spunsul e, desigur, unul afirmativ), dar asta nu-l opre葯te s膬 povesteasc膬 o parabol膬 kafkian膬, 鈥濩膬l膬re葲ul pe g膬leat膬鈥� 葯i s膬 citeze din Morfologia basmului a lui V. I. Propp.

Ce-i drept, Calvino nu a fost 卯ntru totul mul葲umit de textul despre Lejeritate, ar fi vrut s膬-l rescrie, dar moartea nu i-a mai l膬sat timp. Celelalte conferin葲e au o structur膬 mai pu葲in baroc膬.

A葯 men葲iona, 卯n 卯ncheiere, un am膬nunt spectaculos, pomenit de autor la p.137:

鈥炄榯iin葲a sa [a lui Leonardo da Vinci] nu avea egal 卯n lume, dar faptul c膬 nu cuno葯tea latina 葯i gramatica 卯l 卯mpiedica s膬 comunice 卯n scris cu savan葲ii din vremea sa鈥�. Am膬nuntul i-a uimit pe prietenii mei de pe Facebook, dar dac膬 ne g卯ndim c膬 nici Homer nu 葯tia limba latin膬, 卯l putem 卯n葲elege 葯i pe Leonardo, care a vorbit tuturor 卯n imagini universal comprehensibile :)
Profile Image for Simona B.
926 reviews3,125 followers
June 14, 2017
(English review at the bottom)

Per spiegarvi perch茅 bisognerebbe leggere questo saggio a tutti, anche a chi di letteratura non gliene importa e non ne mastica, user貌 una citazione, una soltanto.

Siamo nella prima lezione, Leggerezza. Uno degli emblemi di questo valore per Calvino 猫 il Cavalcanti protagonista della novella VI,9 del Decameron, un personaggio silenzioso, solitario, un personaggio, anche, che all'inizio della novella in questione sembra molte cose, ma non leggero: 猫 un intellettuale, un filosofo, un letterato, un giovane che rinuncia volentieri alla vita chiassosa e gaudente della giovent霉 fiorentina e preferisce dedicarsi alla riflessione, alla meditazione, ai libri. Tale messer Betto e la sua compagnia, allora, decidono un giorno di occupare il proprio tempo "dando briga" al povero Guido, che in quel momento passeggia tra i sepolcri di marmo disposti davanti alla chiesa di San Giovanni. I giovani cominciano a sbeffeggiarlo; sembrano divertirsi, anche, finch茅 Guido non risponde con delle parole che li spiazzano: 芦Signori, voi mi potete dire a casa vostra ci貌 che vi piace禄. E Boccaccio continua cos矛: "E posta la mano sopra una di quelle arche, che grandi erano, s矛 come colui che leggerissimo era, prese un salto e fusi gittato dall'altra parte, e sviluppatosi da loro se n'and貌."

L'interpretazione di questa controbattuta 猫 deliziosa, e la lascio a voi, perch茅, come mi 猫 capitato recentemente di constatare, le battute e le citazioni en passant hanno pi霉 gusto quando le si assaggia solo col pensiero, senza adoperare il bisturi del ragionamento scritto che ne squarcerebbe il velo.
Ma arriviamo cos矛 alla citazione che vi avevo promesso col mio attacco (no, non era quella la citazione), ossia le parole con cui Calvino commenta questo episodio:

"L'agile salto improvviso del poeta-filosofo [...] si solleva sulla pesantezza del mondo, dimostrando che la sua gravit脿 contiene il segreto della leggerezza, mentre quella che molti credono essere la vitalit脿 dei tempi, rumorosa, aggressiva, scalpitante e rombante, appartiene al regno della morte, come un cimitero d'automobili arrugginite."

Ecco perch茅 questi saggi andrebbero letti a tutti e da tutti. Anche per tante altre ragioni, ma soprattutto per questa: perch茅 Calvino non parla mai di letteratura per la letteratura. Parla di letteratura per l'oggi. Parla di letteratura per me e per i miei coinquilini ingegneri, per mia madre che quando sente nominare Dante suda perch茅 le ricorda le interrogazioni al liceo, per mio padre medico che da ragazzino voleva leggere ma non poteva farlo perch茅 non poteva permettersi i libri, per mia sorella, ragazzina, che i libri pu貌 permetterseli ma pare che non voglia investirci pi霉 tempo di quanto sia decoroso per una giovincella degli anni duemila. Quando Calvino parla di letteratura, parla della mia letteratura, della sua letteratura, della letteratura di tutti e della letteratura che non esiste, e che forse esister脿 o forse no, lui una buona parola ce l'ha messa. Parla di una letteratura eterea come profumo e concreta come pane, e io lo amo.

Quindi, gente, parliamo un po' di letteratura anche noi, parliamone senza essere pesanti e senza essere frivoli. Parliamo di letteratura e facciamo vedere che esser leggeri si pu貌, ed 猫 un bene, e che 猫 ancor meglio se si 猫 leggeri pensando. Che, se qualcuno se lo stesse chiedendo, non 猫 affatto un ossimoro.

ENGLISH REVIEW

In order to explain you why everybody should read this book, even those who about literature don't care and don't understand a thing, I'll use a quote, just one quote.

We are in the first of the lectures, or 'memos', according to the title: Lightness. According to Calvino, one of the most effective symbols of this value is the character of Guido Cavalcanti (he's an Italian poet of the XIII century, he really existed, but be aware that here Calvino's talking about the fictional character), whom we find in the ninth story of the sixth day in Boccaccio's Decameron. Cavalcanti is quiet, solitary; he seems many things, but, at least at the beginning of the story, he does not seem light. Quite the opposite: he's an intellectual, a philosopher, a man of letters, a young man who, rather than spending his time with the boisterous Florentine youth, prefers devoting himself to his studies and his meditations. So, one day, Messer Betto and his company see Guido "walking meditatively" among the marble tombs placed in front of the church of San Giovanni in Florence, and they decide to have a little fun of him. Guido's reply floors them: 芦Gentlemen, you may say anything you wish to me in your own home禄. And that's how Boccaccio's goes on: "Then, resting his hand on one of the great tombs and being very nimble, he leaped over it and, landing on the other side, made off and rid himself of them." I could write a never-ending poem about why this translation (which, by the way is not mine but taken from the original English text of Calvino's memos) is several light-years away from the beauty and the elegance that this same passage has in Italian, but that's not the point at all.

I want to leave the interpretation of this quick banter to you, because, as I myself have recently noticed, quotes and witty remarks have a sweeter taste when you taste them only with your mouth, without exposing them to the revealing scalpel of a written and thus definitive explanation.
But now, here it is the quote I promised you at the beginning (because no, the previous quote still wasn't it), that is how Calvino comments this episode:

"The sudden agile leap of the poet-philosopher who raises himself above the weight of the world shows that with all his gravity he has the secret of lightness, and that what many consider to be the vitality of the times -noisy, aggressive, revvy and roaring- belongs to the realm of death, like a cemetery for rusty old cars."

This is why these essays should be read by everyone and to everyone. They should also for other reasons, but for this one above all: because Calvino never speaks about literature only for the sake of literature. He speaks literature fo me and my two flatmates who wants to be engineers, for my mom who can't hear Dante's name without sweating because it reminds her of her school days, for my dad, a doctor, who as a child wanted to read and couldn't because he didn't have the money to afford books, for my little sister who can afford books but doesn't want to give them more time than what's appropriate for a teenager from 2000. When Calvino talks about literature, he talks about my literature, and his literature, and everyone's literature and the literature that does not exist, that maybe will or maybe won't, but however it goes he still gave it credit. He tells us about a literature as ethereal as a scent and as concrete as your daily bread, and I love him.

So, people, let's talk about literature, let's talk about it without heaviness and without frivolity. Let's talk about literature and let's prove that it is possible to be light, and that it's a good thing to be such, and that, better still, it is possible to be light and thinking. Which, for those who are wondering, is not at oxymoron at all.
Profile Image for Forrest.
Author听47 books860 followers
August 7, 2014
Let's start with the fact that Italo Calvino is one of my favorite writers of all time. His crystalline surrealism, easy tone (at least in translation), and whimsical subjects (by which I mean situations and characters, inclusive) are, to me, compelling. To say that I went into this book with a favorable view of the author would be a gross understatement. I absolutely adore Calvino's work.

Now, I am also discovering that I don't really like many books about writing. Moorcock's Death is No Obstacle is, so far as I've read, the best book on writing out there. Calvino's Six Memos for the Next Millennium is a close second. A *very* close second.

What you won't find in this book are lessons on grammar, editorial tips, or the best way to market your book to the masses using obnoxious tactics like going on 欧宝娱乐 and spamming members when you have not bothered to review more than a half dozen books or looked to see if said members share any kind of interest in books of your type whatsoever . . . sorry, was I using my outside voice when I said that? Silly me.

What you will find here is a peek behind Calvino's magic curtain. You will see that even his explanations about how he does his work are magical. You won't see the nuts and bolts of how Calvino mechanically goes about constructing his stories (though he is very methodical), but you will see a high-level treatise on Calvino's state of mind as he writes. This is a philosophical text cleverly disguised as a book about writing.

The book is divided into five sections. "Five?" you ask. "What happened to the sixth?" The sixth memo is "Consistency," lightly penciled into the handwritten table of contents provided by Calvino at the beginning of the book. In fact, it looks as if it had been written in, then erased, an irony that is as Calvino-esque as anything else I can think of.

The first memo, "Lightness," is the one thing that I struggle with the most as a writer. Here, Calvino is not talking about lightness as it relates to hue, but as it relates to mass. He gives the example from Boccaccio's Decameron, a story in which the Florentine poet Guido Cavalcanti is beset by some men who want to pick a (philosophical) fight with him in a graveyard.

Guido, seeing himself surrounded by them, answered quickly: "Gentlemen, you may say anything you wish to me in your own home." Then, resting his hand on one of the great tombs and being very nimble, he leaped over it and, landing on the other side, made off and rid himself of them.

Now, call me strange (it's true), but this is something I can sink my writerly teeth into. I can apply this principle of lightness, not because Calvino has given me specific instructions on how to do it, but because he has opened a window for me to stick my head out, look around, take stock of the landscape, and enjoy it. He's put me in the headspace I need to be in to integrate this principle of lightness into my writing.

And so it is with the remaining principles. Of "Quickness," Calvino states:

I am a Saturn who dreams of being a Mercury, and everything I write reflects these two impulses.

And, reading the context of this memo, I know exactly what he means and see that struggle in myself. In fact, this is my favorite quote about writing ever written. But can I take this down to the grammatical level and explain it to someone else? Hardly. I know in my bones what Calvino is saying, but explain it in figures and diagrams, I cannot.

In the section on "Exactitude," Calvino goes to some extent to explain how vagueness can only be properly described, with exactitude. In speaking of the evocative power of words and the importance of using them in the most exact way, he states:

The word connects the visible trace with the invisible thing, the absent thing, the thing that is desired or feared, like a frail emergency bridge flung over an abyss.

Again, a bit of intuition and reflection is required to really grasp what he is saying. Not because his statement is poorly written, but because this notion is an abstract concept. This "writing book," if one can assign such a banal descriptor to it, requires the reader to think!

Memo four, "Visibility," dwells on the imagination as the impetus for all creativity, particularly the visual imagination. While he acknowledges that literary work might arise from the hearing of a good turn of phrase or from an academic exercise, the majority of such creations arise from a visual cue in the writer's mind. Thus, the need to use exactitude to describe the visual seed of a story or book, which allows the reader to see into the mind of the writer, if but for a moment, and anchors the story in the reader's mind.

"Multiplicity" is the fifth and most inappropriately titled memo. I might have used the word "Nestedness" or even "Complexity" to give the reader a head start, but, hey, it wasn't my book to write. I do feel that this is the weakest section of the book (and Calvino acknowledges as much), as the decision to try to form an all-inclusive novel (meaning: including ALL), is really a question of writerly preference, rather than a universal principle which one ought to apply to writing a novel. Still, Calvino calls on the example of Borges and the Oulipo to demonstrate what is possible in a novel, eve if the pursuit of such a work might not always be advisable.

As a part of this fifth memo, Calvino states his vision of the aim of literature:

. . . the grand challenge for literature is to be capable of weaving together the various branches of knowledge, the various 'codes,' into a manifold and multifaceted vision of the world.

Unfortunately, Calvino did not live to see the new millennium. He would have been fascinated by the possibilities of hypertext, no doubt, and his memo on multiplicity dwells, in fact, on the need for more open-ended work with several possible endings, a multi-dimensional plot that reaches through various realities (a'la Borges' "The Garden of Forking Paths"), and gathers them into one text. He even goes so far as to call his experimental If on a winter's night a traveler a "hypernovel".

Perhaps, in another reality, Calvino is exploring the infinite possibilities of literature and will one day find his way back to teach us more, like some kind of literary Messiah. In the meantime, he has left Six Memos for the Next Millennium as a travel journal showing the direction he might have gone; inviting us to follow.
Profile Image for piperitapitta.
1,033 reviews437 followers
February 17, 2018
Questione di feeling.

[10 aprile 2012]
Che ieri poi, in visita al MAXXI, mi accorgo che sulle porte a vetri del museo ci sono gli sticker delle cinque parole corrispondenti ai titoli delle lezioni americane.
Quando si dice la 蝉颈苍肠谤辞苍颈肠颈迟脿 :-)

Apprezzo, ascolto, mi faccio piccola piccola per manifesta ignoranza e taccio.
笔别谤貌, 别辫辫别谤貌, tra me e Calvino la scintilla non scocca proprio mai.
Mi entusiasma con la leggerezza, cattura la mia attenzione con la 谤补辫颈诲颈迟脿, mi convince con l'esattezza (forse per affinit脿 e orgoglio zodiacale), mi lascia perplessa con la 惫颈蝉颈产颈濒颈迟脿, ed infine mi d脿 il colpo di grazia, e spegne ogni entusiasmo, con la 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿.
Decisamente, se lui 猫 cristallo, io sono fiamma.
E se devo leggere di Paul Val茅ry continuo a preferire sentirne parlare, leggerne, da Stefan Zweig.

Il mio parroco 猫 differente.
Stanca di sentire Don Fabrizio parlare di Italo Calvino - lui che ci ha scritto su persino la tesi di Laurea e che nemmeno due settimane fa 猫 stato intervistato su RadioUno nel programma 芦Il Viaggiatore禄 a lui dedicato - ed in particolare di queste Lezioni Americane senza averle lette, decido quantomeno di aggiungerle in wishlist. Giusto il tempo di farlo e mi arrivano due ebook sulla mia email (ovvio che non far貌 mai i nomi dei miei spacciatori che ringrazio e bacio appassionatamente!). 脠 un segno sicuramente di quella trascendenza mancata dell'autore di cui parla Don Fabrizio. Oppure un segno del destino, per cui inizio immediatamente a leggerlo. Ehm..., in ufficio, certo.
E dopo poche pagine chi mi ritrovo l脿, nero su bianco? Henry James e !
Tutte queste coincidenze cominciano a darmi un po' fastidio :-)
Profile Image for Emilio Berra.
286 reviews254 followers
May 8, 2022
Una rilettura interessantissima. E' un libro imperdibile per chi ama leggere testi letterari.
Si tratta di lezioni che Italo Calvino avrebbe dovuto tenere all'Universit脿 di Harward. Come sappiamo, la morte improvvisa non gliene diede il tempo.

L'autore individua alcuni valori che la letteratura dovrebbe conservare nel III millennio.
Scelgo di parlare qui della "leggerezza", 'lezione' che ho trovato particolarmente affascinante.
I. Calvino ci dice che la propria scelta di scrittura 猫 stata contrassegnata da "una sottrazione di peso (...) soprattutto (...) alla struttura del racconto e al linguaggio".

"La leggerezza pensosa pu貌 far apparire la frivolezza come pesante e opaca" .
La levit脿 diventa preziosa oggi pi霉 che mai, perch茅 "quella che molti credono essere la vitalit脿 dei tempi, rumorosa, scalpitante e roboante, appartiene al regno della morte".
Viene ricordato come Leopardi abbia associato all'idea di felicit脿 "immagini di leggerezza: gli uccelli, una voce femminile che canta da una finestra, la trasparenza dell'aria, e soprattutto la luna". La luna che, "appena si affaccia nei versi dei poeti, ha avuto sempre il potere di comunicare un senso di levit脿, di sospensione, di silenzioso e calmo incantesimo".
Profile Image for Paul.
Author听0 books105 followers
February 6, 2022
What a pleasure it was to spend time in the company of Calvino, chatting to me like an erudite and engaging friend, expounding on his ideas about literary composition as I rode the bus or train (I refrained from reading 'Six Memos' when at the wheel of my car). Along the way, he shared extensive extracts from some of his favourite writers and it was fun to catch the cadences of the original Italian, German and French.

It was a melancholy journey too. The five essays here were prepared by Sig. C in preparation for a series of talks to American students. The sixth was never written. Calvino died of a brain haemorrhage before he could begin. And that would mean there would be no further works from the author of 'Invisible Cities' and 'If on a Winter's Night', 'Diffficult Loves' and 'The Baron in the Trees'. This leaves one feeling bereft also. Imagine what more might have come from quella penna - the brilliant 'Palomar' had appeared just two years before.

And coming from the pen of Calvino, this is not a straightforward guide to writing, there are no chapters on plotting and point of view or the use of commas and semi-colons. Sig. C themes his talks into qualities that great literature might possess, providing us with an insight into his compositional process as he does so. These qualities are elusive yet pertinent: lightness, quickness, exactitude, visibility, multiplicity. We shall never know what he had to say about consistency...

'Lightness' and 'Quickness' tell us much about Calvino's approach. 'Lightness' involves both the removal of unnecessary words and transporting the reader on a fantastic journey, on a magic carpet ride or the like. It explains his fondness for fairy tale and myth. Then there is quickness, the brevity to be found in the chapters in 'Invisible Cities' and 'Palomar'. He cites a concisely-told legend about Charlemagne's love for a young woman as the template for this ideal.

'Visibility' explores the link between an image and the words that describe it, and, inter alia, the matter of which came first. Calvino argues that for some writers it's the latter and for others (himself included), it's the former. He says that many of the 'Cosmicomics' began with a single image or vision around which the brief tale was built. He quotes from Dante and Loyola, suggesting that they worked in the same way, employing their "mental cinema" (what a superb phrase!) to describe the unseen, their visions of heaven and hell.

Calvino cites Carlo Emilio Gadda (hitherto unknown to me) and Musil as producers of 'Multiplicity', pursuing the encyclopaedic, elaborating and digressing, even preventing the latter from being able to complete his work. He cites Flaubert and Proust too then brings things up-to-date (c. 1985) with his admiration for Borges and Perec (it was reciprocated). And who better to represent this concept than the two great writers who explored the encyclopaedic through such very different methods?

I think my favourite quotation of all came from 'Exactitude', where Calvino showed us another Italian genius at work, da Vinci revising his description of a sea monster, inspired by the unearthing of a fossilised creature (I was also fascinated to learn about the old theory that the earth was expanding and swallowing up such specimens):

O how often were you seen amid the waves of the vast and swollen ocean, like a mountain defeating and subduing them, and your black and bristling back ploughing through the waters, and your stately, solemn bearing!

Here Calvino seeks to present the exactitude of both abstract concepts and the visibly perceived. He also quotes that exquisite passage from his own work where Polo describes the square of a chess board to Khan and the history of the tree that was felled to make it.

These essays are a delight for the reader and writer alike. Grazie mille, vecchio amico, e riposa in pace.
Profile Image for Carlo Mascellani.
Author听15 books288 followers
May 15, 2021
Lezioni a tema per il prossimo millenio, tratte da un ciclo di conferenze pubblicato postumo. Ma si tratta anche di riflessioni che, traendo spunto dalla letteratura tanto cara a Calvino (attraverso le numerose citazioni, possiamo constatare la profonda erudizione dell'autore), affrontano, in realt脿, i grandi dilemmi che si confida l'avvenire possa risolvere, le paure, i dubbi, le contraddizioni di un mondo e di una societ脿 che Calvino stesso non ha mai smesso d'investigare come uomo e come scrittore.
Profile Image for Emma Angeline.
79 reviews3,030 followers
May 9, 2022
Was this occasionally confusing? Yes yes it was. Was I also reading this like 10 pages ago and falling asleep bc I was attempting to read it while tired before bed? Yes yes I did.

Fun and thoughtful. I agree with a lot of what he has to say. But I should probably have been more awake to read this ngl
Profile Image for Siti.
389 reviews153 followers
August 26, 2018
鈥淭ra i valori che vorrei fossero tramandati al prossimo millennio c鈥櫭� soprattutto questo: d鈥檜na letteratura che abbia fatto proprio il gusto dell鈥檕rdine mentale e dell鈥檈sattezza, l鈥檌ntelligenza della poesia e nello stesso tempo della scienza e della filosofia, come quella del Val茅ry, saggista e prosatore鈥︹€�
鈥�(鈥�.)la grande sfida della letteratura 猫 il saper tessere insieme i diversi saperi e i diversi codici in una visione plurima, sfaccettata del mondo鈥�.
鈥淪olo se poeti e scrittori si proporranno imprese che nessun altro osa immaginare la letteratura continuer脿 ad avere una funzione.鈥�
Nel 1985, alla fine di un millennio, Calvino si interroga sulla letteratura, sulla sua sorte e su quella del libro nell鈥檈ra cosiddetta tecnologica industriale. Indaga la specificit脿 della letteratura, la sua qualit脿 e i valori di cui si nutre cogliendo, il primo fra gli italiani a cui fu rivolto, il prestigioso invito dell鈥檜niversit脿 di Harvard a tenere le Charles Eliot Norton Poetry Lectures, sei conferenze a tema libero nel corso di un anno accademico. La morte lo colse con cinque di esse pronte e la sesta in via di definizione, proprio quella sulla consistenza, quella che avrebbe dovuto aprire gli interventi e che 猫 a me la pi霉 gradita. Leggerezza, 谤补辫颈诲颈迟脿, esattezza, 惫颈蝉颈产颈濒颈迟脿 e 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿 sono i restanti temi di cui si occupa. Che mix! Presi cos矛, come dei semplici sostantivi, alcuni di essi, associati alla letteratura parrebbero quasi dei disvalori. Come pu貌 essere leggera la letteratura? O rapida? E poi quando 猫 esatta sfiora la tediosit脿. Visibile? Se lo augurano tutti gli autori. E molteplice? Con la dirompente specificit脿 dei moduli narrativi che la contraddistingue? A entrare nel vivo degli interventi si acquisisce invece un鈥檌dea ben precisa e circostanziata di ognuno di questi valori ritrovandosi, di fatto, a calcare l鈥檌ntera produzione di Calvino che lui stesso cita in maniera autoreferenziale, senza che ci貌 disturbi ma, al contrario, sorprenda, ritrovandosi piacevolmente, il conoscitore della sua produzione. Il lettore ha ora in mano la cerniera fra la produzione artistica e l鈥檈stetica che l鈥檋a nutrita, in modo chiaro e preciso come non pu貌 accadere leggendo solo i testi. Ad ogni valore segue precisa definizione, dopo ampia trattazione costellata di puntuali riferimenti bibliografici che spaziano nella vasta cultura letteraria dell鈥檃utore da Dante a Cavalcanti, passando per Boccaccio, Lucrezio, Ovidio, James, Dickinson, Shakespeare, Diderot, Sterne, Leopardi, Val猫ry, Gadda e tanti altri. Su tutti spicca Borges che pare compendiare queste caratteristiche. A noi lettori, di quella letteratura che 猫 stata prodotta dopo, non resta che chiederci quali di questi valori incontriamo, se li incontriamo, e se le capacit脿 creative e immaginative riescono a tener testa all鈥檌pertrofia delle immagini che sovrapponendosi nel nostro cervello confondono quello che esperiamo con quello che vediamo non rendendoci capaci di comprendere quando invece stiamo creando usando semplicemente la nostra immaginazione.
Per me 猫 difficile dare risposta, pi霉 facile cercare rifugio nella letteratura classica o riconoscere letteratura, nella produzione contemporanea, in quella scrittura che sa far vibrare mente e cuore con contenuti universali restituendomi la mia condizione umana, molto facile da perdersi.
Profile Image for Sandra.
954 reviews318 followers
December 4, 2014
Sono le conferenze che Calvino prepar貌 per l鈥橴niversit脿 di Harvard, che non furono mai tenute perch茅 la morte lo colse improvvisamente.
Ne erano previste sei, ma nel suo dattiloscritto, lasciato pronto sopra la scrivania da mettere in valigia, ne furono trovate solamente cinque, la sesta l鈥檃vrebbe scritta negli Stati Uniti, si sarebbe intitolata 鈥淐onsistency鈥� e di essa Esther Calvino dice che avrebbe parlato di Bartleby lo scrivano. In appendice vi 猫 uno scritto, intitolato 鈥渃ominciare e finire鈥�, ritrovato tra le carte dello scrittore, in cui Calvino illustra, citando esempi illuminanti, l鈥檌mportanza e la significativit脿 degli incipit del romanzo, di quel fatidico e delicatissimo momento in cui si oltrepassa la soglia della 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿 del mondo vissuto per entrare in un mondo nuovo, quello della parola, a partire dall鈥檌nvocazione alle Muse di Omero fino a Proust e Musil, concludendo che la storia della letteratura 猫 ricca di incipit memorabili, mentre i finali originali sono pi霉 rari, a dimostrazione di quanto sia decisivo il collegamento tra la 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿 dell鈥檈sistente e la particolarit脿 dell鈥檕pera letteraria, che 猫 鈥渦na minima porzione in cui l鈥檜niverso si cristallizza in una forma, in cui acquista un senso, non definitivo, ma vivente come un organismo鈥�.
Le lezioni contengono un鈥檈sposizione articolata e illustrata con continui riferimenti a opere letterarie classiche e moderne dei requisiti che, secondo la concezione moderna che Calvino aveva, la letteratura del nuovo millennio avrebbe dovuto salvare: leggerezza, 谤补辫颈诲颈迟脿, esattezza, 惫颈蝉颈产颈濒颈迟脿, 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿. Mi limito a dire che, nonostante l鈥檃pparente autonomia degli argomenti trattati, ho rilevato una circolarit脿 nelle tematiche svolte da Calvino, in quelle che egli individua come le linee guida per lo scrittore, ma anche per il lettore, tale per cui esse si presentano come complementari o comunque interdipendenti.
Ma si tratta soltanto di lezioni di letteratura? Io penso che siano lezioni di vita, vita che 猫 un鈥檈nciclopedia, una biblioteca, dove tutto pu貌 essere continuamente rimescolato e riordinato in tutti i modi possibili, che ci vengono date da uno scrittore che 猫 al contempo fantasioso e innovativo nello stile ma anche razionalmente rigoroso come uno scienziato nell鈥檈sposizione delle proprie teorie.
Questo 猫 un libro da tenere costantemente in lettura, da rileggere quando se ne ha voglia per trovarvi ogni volta spunti nuovi e nuove riflessioni.
Profile Image for L.S. Popovich.
Author听2 books439 followers
December 29, 2019
Calvino's lectures, prepared but not delivered late in his career, are just as thought-provoking as his fiction. He discusses some key, broad aspects of literature, and his personal discoveries of certain propulsive forces in writing. His discussion of Multiplicity I found most interesting, and the way he categorized encyclopedic and plural texts. It will certainly aid your understanding if you are already familiar with Flaubert, Gadda, Balzac, Ovid, Dante, Boccaccio, Shakespeare, Mann, Goethe, Poe, Borges, Calvino, Leopardi, Eliot, Joyce, Perec, da Vinci and more, but familiarity is by no means required for enjoyment. Skillfully, Calvino ropes in the work of all of these authors, outlines their methods in some measure and suggests how precisionism or autodidacticism or lightness and suggestion led into the completion or success of the work. By handling a wide range of styles and general approaches, Calvino offers a splendid viewpoint of artistic achievements of the mind.

There are many quotes, especially from the Zibaldone, which could have used some condensation. But it is easy to see how Calvino's own work, such as If On a Winter's Night, Cloven Viscount, Baron in the Trees, Nonexistent Knight, Invisible Cities, Palomar, Cosmicomics and other books, were inspired by literary predecessors, and he even reveals the sparks of intuitive imagination that led to their shape and form.
Profile Image for Marcello S.
621 reviews276 followers
January 19, 2021
Pensieri sparsi:

- Un libro che parla di libri. Ottimo.
- 脠 venuta l鈥檕ra che io cerchi una definizione complessiva per il mio lavoro.
- Parecchio complesso, con diversi livelli di lettura. Lo si pu貌 affrontare lasciandosi trasportare tra stimoli e suggestioni letterarie, ma per capirlo pienamente credo serva conoscere meglio di quanto le conosco io le opere di Calvino e, in generale, avere una dimestichezza nel creare legami mentali e relazioni all鈥檌nterno del mondo della letteratura.
- Il libro che pi霉 mi ha messo voglia di leggere: La montagna incantata.
- Di fatto, credo lo si possa catalogare come un saggio sulla letteratura. Per貌 猫 cos矛 basato su opinioni personali, e per nulla esaustivo nella trattazione dei temi scelti, che a tratti mi 猫 sfuggito il senso.
- La lezione che mi ha interessato di pi霉: 惭辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿. Calvino scrive che听La letteratura vive solo se si pone degli obiettivi smisurati, anche al di l脿 d鈥檕gni possibilit脿 di realizzazione.听Mi intriga molto la ricerca di romanzi ibridi, enciclopedici, dissonanti, con una 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿 di riferimenti e chiavi di lettura. Romanzi con informazioni non necessarie, fittizie, inventate, specialistiche. A livello strutturale Calvino ne fa un discorso trasversale, dalla brevit脿 e densit脿 dei racconti di Borges (che pare essere uno dei suoi pi霉 chiari punti di riferimento), fino ai romanzi lunghi (Musil, Flaubert, Mann, Joyce, Perec). Questo perch猫 il romanzo lungo si basa, spesso, su strutture accumulative, combinatorie. Credo che, se Calvino avesse scritto oggi questa lezione, forse avrebbe inserito anche citazioni da opere che rientrano di pi霉 tra le mie letture, come Bola帽o, DFW, Houellebecq, Knausg氓rd, Pynchon, Auster, DeLillo. O almeno cos矛 mi piace pensarla.

[74/100]
Profile Image for Eyl眉l G枚rm眉艧.
675 reviews4,074 followers
August 6, 2023
"Her 艧ey, d眉nyada, bir kitaba varmak i莽in vard谋r" demi艧 Mallarm茅, bu kitaptan 枚臒rendim. 鉂わ笍

Italo Calvino'nun 枚l眉m眉nden bir sene kadar evvel Harvard 脺niversitesi'nde verdi臒i bir dizi konferans谋n metinlerini i莽eren Amerika Dersleri, Calvino'nun baz谋 kitaplar谋n谋n s谋rlar谋n谋 bar谋nd谋ran, bence yazar谋n d眉艧眉nme ve yazma bi莽imini daha iyi anlamak i莽in muazzam bir anahtar sunan bir k眉莽眉k kitap. K谋sac谋k olmalar谋na ra臒men olduk莽a yo臒un ve felsef卯 denemeler bunlar, okurken epey odaklanmay谋 gerektiriyor.

Konu艧malar谋n metinlerini 枚l眉m眉nden 枚nce d眉zenleme 艧ans谋 olmam谋艧 Calvino'nun, o nedenle bu kitaba kendisi olsa ne isim se莽erdi bilemiyoruz. Ama e艧i Esther Calvino'nun se莽ti臒i ismin alt ba艧l谋臒谋 "Gelecek Biny谋l 陌莽in Alt谋 脰neri" olmu艧. Yeni milenyuma ad谋m atmam谋za 15 sene kala Calvino edebiyata ve kurtarmam谋z / ta艧谋mam谋z gereken baz谋 艧eylere dair ak谋l y眉r眉t眉yor. Listesi 艧枚yle: hafiflik, h谋zl谋l谋k, kesinlik, g枚r眉n眉rl眉k, ve 莽okluk. Bu kavramlar 莽er莽evesinde hem kendi eserlerini, hem de ba艧ka yazarlar谋n eserlerini inceliyor. Dante, Cervantes, Proust, Dickens, Conrad, Balzac, Mann, Flaubert, Joyce, Pessoa, Kundera, Dostoyevski, Musil, Perec ve elbette ki Borges gibi tan谋d谋k isimler var kitapta.

Tan谋d谋臒谋m yazarlar谋n okudu臒um eserlerine dair Calvino'nun d眉艧眉ncelerini okuman谋n hazz谋 bir yanda, k眉t眉phanemde bekleyen ancak hen眉z giri艧emedi臒im eserlere dair beni heyecanland谋ran analizler okumak ve yeni yazarlarla tan谋艧mak bir di臒er yanda. 脟ok lezzetli, 莽ok besleyici, epey kafa kar谋艧t谋r谋c谋 ve ayn谋 anda ufuk a莽谋c谋 bir kitap bu. 脰zellikle yazmay谋 deneyen herkesin okumas谋 gerekir diye d眉艧眉n眉yorum.

Ancak tad谋na varabilmek i莽in en az谋ndan Calvino'nun baz谋 k眉lt kitaplar谋n谋 okumu艧 olmak laz谋m. Bir K谋艧 Gecesi E臒er Bir Yolcu, Palomar, Kozmokomik 脰yk眉ler ve G枚r眉nmez Kentler'e ba艧ka t眉rl眉 bakman谋n ipu莽lar谋 var i莽inde, Calvino'yu bu 莽ok sevdi臒im eserleri yazmaya g枚t眉ren itkileri onun a臒z谋ndan dinlemek muhte艧em oldu.

Her okurun sevece臒i bir kitap de臒il ama yazman谋n dinamiklerine, kitaplar aras谋ndaki 莽谋plak g枚zle g枚r眉nmeyen 枚rt眉l眉 kavramsal ba臒lara, edebiyat denizinde y眉zerken ka莽谋rd谋臒谋m谋z izleklere dair kendinizi zorlamak isterseniz - buyrunuz.
Profile Image for Jonfaith.
2,079 reviews1,705 followers
February 13, 2014
I would not be so drastic. I think we are always searching for something hidden or merely potential or hypothetical, following its traces whenever they appear on the surface. I think our basic mental processes have come down to us through every period of history, ever since our Paleolithic forefathers, who were hunters and gatherers. The word connects the visible trace with the invisible thing, the absent thing, the thing that is desired or feared, like a frail emergency bridge flung over an abyss.

Calvino's posthumous lectures are a grand gallop across a cherished earth of letters. The Six Memos For The Next Millennium are a celebration of Lightness, Quickness, Exactitude, Visibility and Multiplicity (the sixth was never written at the time of Calvino's passing). The ruminations and citations extend from Ovid and Lucretius onward through Dante, Boccaccio, Shakespeare, Cyrano, Valery, Flaubert, Musil and, especially, Borges. This is a wonderful construction, one without grandiosity, but teeming with an organic eloquence.

Were I to choose an auspicious image for the new millennium, I would choose that one: the sudden agile leap of the poet-philosopher who raises himself above the weight of the world, showing that with all his gravity he ahs the secret of lightness, and that what many consider to be the vitality of the times--noisy, aggressive, revving and roaring--belongs to the realm of death, like a cemetery for rusty old cars.
Profile Image for Sumirti.
106 reviews328 followers
May 22, 2015

INTERVIEWER: What place, if any at all, does delirium have in your working life?


ITALO CALVINO: Delirium? . . . Let鈥檚 assume I answer, I am always rational. Whatever I say or write, everything is subject to reason, clarity, and logic. What would you think of me? You鈥檇 think I鈥檓 completely blind when it comes to myself, a sort of paranoiac. If on the other hand I were to answer, Oh, yes, I am really delirious; I always write as if I were in a trance, I don鈥檛 know how I write such crazy things, you鈥檇 think me a fake, playing a not-too-credible character. Maybe the question we should start from is what of myself do I put into what I write. My answer鈥擨 put my reason, my will, my taste, the culture I belong to, but at the same time I cannot听control, shall we say, my neurosis or what we could call delirium.


-------------------------------


Italo Calvino is a literary philosopher. He has always strived to provide an alternative view to see through this world and to decipher its beauty and secrets through the mode of imagination and fantasy. His mind is few of those which fascinates and asks me to question the very possibilities of human intelligence. When I finished reading, "If on a winter's night a traveller" and "Invisible Cities", I was intrigued and thrilled, and had a nagging curiosity to understand the working; the underlying formula; the quest which must have lead the author to write them. "Six Memos for the next millennium" provides me a window to understand the methodology and motivation of Calvino's art and magic.

Reading Calvino is an experience in itself. He has the marvelous gift to create at the juxtaposition of science and art, the man who wants to combine both. This particular book under discussion is a loose speech prepared to be delivered in Charles Eliot Norton Lectures, in 1984. "They became an obsession, and one day he announced to me that he had ideas and material for eight lectures", writes his wife Esther. And further continues to say that the eighth lecture, had it been presented, would have been, "On the beginning and the ending[of novels]". But this collection has five lectures, sixth one unwritten, and provides the dissection of Calvino's own works and also an idea of the enormous range of his inspirations.

Heads up, Calvino places 'Lightness' as the first value to be discussed. As someone whose writings makes the reader to fly, it is no surprise that Calvino places this value on top. He is quick to make it clear that he is proposing to talk of the lightness which one derives from intelligence/ thoughtfulness, and not the lightness of frivolity. "Lightness for me goes with precision and determination, not with vagueness and the haphazard", and aptly quotes Paul Valery,"One should be light like a bird, and not like a feather". Of all the passages which he writes to espouse his first value, the one that stood close to my heart is his tribute to Milan Khundera's novel "The unbearable Lightness of Being". When I finished Kundera's novel, I had the feeling of jubilant joy and freshness as if I stood beside a waterfall with patchy greenery surrounding it. I never fully understood the reason behind the 'light' feeling I had then, for the novel is an excruciatingly painful one to read. But, Calvino explains beautifully:

"His novel shows how everything we choose and value in life for its lightness soon reveals its true, unbearable weight. Perhaps only the liveliness and mobility of the intelligence escape this sentence - the very qualities with which this novel is written, and which belong to a world quite different from the one we live in"


With 'Quickness' as his second lecture, he brings open the secret of a story which is its economy, the form and structure, rhythm and underlying logic. His love for fairytales and folklore, and his varied reading of classics have peppered the whole book, and he quotes them laboriously to show the agility of thought and expression. Like a tangent that strikes an arc and flow on its own, he touches Galileo, Leopardi and mythology, and he turns himself into a thread that connects the parallels. He also predicts the sure raise of mass media (and social media), and had the foresight to suggest that Conciseness will be the virtue of the new millennia.

"I will confine myself to telling you that I dream of immense cosmologies, sagas, and epics all reduced to the dimensions of an epigram"


In 'Exactitude' and 'Visibility', Calvino explores the calculated and well-defined symmetry of a work, and the beauty and nature of visual imagination, respectively. Julian Barnes has said, 鈥淓verything you invent is true: you can be sure of that. Poetry is a subject as precise as geometry.鈥�听 It is the same kind of obsession which Calvino exudes. His search is to create an art as perfect as a mathematical equation or a geometry. To create an orderliness using literature as his medium.

Literature - and I mean the literature that matches up these requirements - is the Promised Land in which language becomes what it really ought to be.

A work of literature is one of these minimal portions in which the existent crystallizes into a form, acquires a meaning - not fixed, not definitive, not hardened into a mineral immobility, but alive as an organism. Poetry is the great enemy of chance, in spite of also being a daughter of chance and knowing
that in the last resort, chance will win the battle


Both 'Exactitude' and 'Visibility' are also the values which could easily be expected in other arts and most importantly in painting, drawing etc., Perhaps, is it because of the fact that Calvino himself was trained in the art of drawing when he was an adolescent and his extraordinary love for movies as a youngster that must have led him to the love of forms and colors?

Next to 'Lightness' and 'Quickness', my favorite lecture is on 'Multiplicity'. No wonder Calvino is inspired by technical-engineer background writers like Gadda and Musil, and he is also enamored by their capacity of excruciating detail. He quotes Gadda, Musil and Proust, all of those authors who never had an ending for their works as a denouement or struggled to have a one, something a game which Calvino would like to play in his literary works. Isn't it ironic and looks like a divine comedy that this book which stands as his final legacy must itself remain unfinished, although each of the chapters is surrealistically complete and conclusive on its own?

But perhaps the answer that stands closest to my heart is something else: Think what it would be to have a work conceived from outside the self,a work that would let us escape the limited perspective of the individual ego, not only to enter into selves like our own but to give speech to that which has no language, to the bird perching on the edge of the gutter,
To the tree in spring and the tree in fall, to stone, to cement, to place鈥�.


Somewhere else, Calvino wrote almost emphatically, "the less one understands the more posterity will appreciate my profundity of thought. In fact, let me say:

POSTERITY IS STUPID


Think how annoyed they鈥檒l be when they read that!"

Perhaps, Calvino might have treated Posterity with less glory and empathy. But, time, the sure hands of which determines the best, will always treasure Calvino as an original writer, with a voice which movingly spoke for all that is wonderful in human beings, for all the ages to come and even beyond eternity.


References:

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Profile Image for Mana Ravanbod.
383 reviews229 followers
July 30, 2021
趩丕倬 噩丿蹖丿 讴鬲丕亘 丕夭 賳卮乇 賲乇讴夭 倬蹖丿丕 賲蹖鈥屫促堌� 賵 禺賵丕賳丿賳卮 亘乇丕蹖 賴乇 丕賴賱 丕丿亘蹖丕鬲蹖 賵丕噩亘鈥屫� 丕爻鬲 丕夭 賴夭丕乇鬲丕 丨乇賮 亘蹖鈥屫池жㄛ� 讴賴 丕蹖賳鈥屫坟辟� 丌賳鈥屫坟辟� 丕夭 丕蹖賳 讴丕乇诏丕賴 賵 丌賳 丌丿賲 賵 丕蹖賳 讴丕賳丕賱 鬲賱诏乇丕賲蹖 卮賳蹖丿賴 蹖丕 禺賵丕賳丿賴 丕爻鬲貨 趩賵賳 氐蹖賯賱 乇賵丨 賳賵卮鬲丕乇 丿乇 鬲丕乇蹖禺 賳賵卮鬲賳 乇丕 賳卮丕賳 賲蹖鈥屫囏� 賵 乇诏賴鈥屬囏й� 丿乇禺卮丕賳蹖 丕夭 賯乇賳鈥屬囏й� 倬蹖卮 鬲丕 丨丕賱丕 倬蹖卮 趩卮賲 賲蹖鈥屭┴簇� 賵 賳卮丕賳 賲蹖鈥屫囏�.
禺賵丕賳賳丿賴鈥屫й� 讴賴 丿乇 賳賵卮鬲賳 讴賵卮卮蹖 讴乇丿賴 亘丕卮丿 賵 亘賴卮 噩丿蹖 賮讴乇 讴乇丿賴 亘丕卮丿 賵 丿乇 賳賵卮鬲賳 爻禺鬲诏蹖乇 亘丕卮丿 丕夭 丕蹖賳 讴鬲丕亘 賱匕鬲蹖 禺賵丕賴丿 亘乇丿 賳诏賮鬲賳蹖. 丕蹖賳 乇丕 亘賴 鬲噩乇亘賴鈥屰� 丿賵爻鬲丕賳 賳夭丿蹖讴 卮丕賴丿 亘賵丿賲 讴賴 馗乇丕賮鬲鈥屬囏й� 讴丕賱賵蹖賳賵 丿乇 鬲毓亘蹖乇賴丕 趩賯丿乇 乇丕賴诏卮丕爻鬲.
Profile Image for Nick.
194 reviews180 followers
April 1, 2008
Calvino is just so effortlessly wonderful. He and literature have a very intimate relationship and she tells him secrets about herself that no one else gets to hear. Until now! Calvino spills the beans on what are the qualities he feels are most important to the literature of the future: lightness, quickness, exactitude, visibility, and multiplicity.

I think my favorites were lightness and multiplicity considering that quickness, exactitude, and visibility seem to be very self-evidently positive qualities of literature (who wants to read a slow, vague, abstract novel?) But the idea of lightness as a positive quality was fresh for me: not lightness as insubstantial but rather, "be light like the bird, not the feather." And the goal of literature as a connector of the wildly disparate knowledges of the modern world, the multiplicity of knowledge in every book, I think is a courageous , especially if coupled with quickness and lightness.

Calvino occasionally meanders a wee bit too far from his topics in the essays but his digressions are terrifically thought-provoking. His vast knowledge of world literature is also inspiring--he basically provides a list of great authors you should read (if they're good enough for Calvino...).

Although this has the potential to be a little bit too academic for some, I heartily recommend this as caviar for a hungry mind.
Profile Image for Andrea.
162 reviews62 followers
March 2, 2021
Nel 1984, Calvino fu invitato dall'Universit脿 di Harvard a tenere nel successivo anno accademico un ciclo di sei conferenze per le famose Charles Eliot Norton Poetry Lectures. Era la prima volta che l'Universit脿 di Harvard proponeva di tenere queste prestigiose conferenze (in passato affidate a personalit脿 del calibro di T. S. Eliot e Jorge Luis Borges) a uno scrittore italiano. Sulla scelta dell'argomento di tali conferenze venne data carta bianca all'autore, che decise di dedicarle ai valori letterari da salvaguardare per il prossimo millennio. Prima di partire per l'America, Calvino scrisse le prime cinque lezioni: 鈥淟eggerezza鈥�, 鈥淩apidit脿鈥�, 鈥淓sattezza鈥�, 鈥淰isibilit脿鈥� e 鈥湶汛潜舫俦鸨璞艟背背倜犫€�. La sesta, 鈥淐oerenza鈥�, che nei progetti doveva essere incentrata sull'opera di Herman Melville 鈥淏artleby, lo scrivano鈥�, sarebbe stata scritta ad Harvard. La sua morte, purtroppo, sopraggiunse improvvisamente, prima della partenza per l'America, e i dattiloscritti di queste lezioni vennero pubblicati postumi, corredati da un'appendice in cui venivano inseriti gli appunti per un'ulteriore conferenza, 鈥淐ominciare e finire鈥�, dedicata all'importanza degli incipit e degli explicit nelle opere letterarie.

Con un linguaggio molto comprensibile, chiaro e semplice, ma anche estremamente ricco di significato, elegante e suggestivo, possiamo dire scientificamente esatto, Calvino ci spiega quelli che sono i valori che la letteratura deve traghettare nel terzo millennio. Questi valori sono anche quelli che hanno illuminato le opere precedenti di Calvino, e infatti durante la spiegazione 猫 lo stesso autore a dare in tal senso una chiave di lettura alle sue fatiche letterarie: ad esempio, vengono citate la leggerezza della trilogia 鈥淚 nostri antenati鈥�, la 谤补辫颈诲颈迟脿 di 鈥淧alomar鈥�, l'esattezza de 鈥淟e Cosmicomiche鈥� e di 鈥淭i con zero鈥�, la 惫颈蝉颈产颈濒颈迟脿 de 鈥淚l castello dei destini incrociati鈥�, la 尘辞濒迟别辫濒颈肠颈迟脿 di 鈥淪e una notte d'inverno un viaggiatore鈥�; ma in ogni opera di Calvino si ritrovano tutti questi valori contemporaneamente, come ne 鈥淟e citt脿 invisibili鈥� e ne 鈥淟e Cosmicomiche鈥�, menzionate in pi霉 lezioni. Si comprende, inoltre, come Calvino, oltre ad essere stato un eccellente scrittore, sia anche stato un raffinatissimo lettore: col suo occhio critico, la sua mente geniale e il suo ragionamento puntuale, quasi chirurgico, in queste brevi lezioni l'autore ci fa dare una sbirciata a volo d'aquila su tutta la storia della letteratura, offrendoci una panoramica che va da Lucrezio ed Ovidio a Dante, Petrarca e Boccaccio, fino a Shakespeare e Cervantes; da Swift, Defoe e Sterne, fino a Melville, Balzac, Mallarm茅 e Flaubert; da Leopardi a Kafka, da Jarry a Joyce, da Borges e Valery a Queneau e Perec; da Mann a Musil, da Gadda a Montale, e cos矛 via con tantissimi altri esempi di altissima letteratura.

Leggere questi testi, in virt霉 del loro carattere postumo e della loro incompiutezza, d脿 una sensazione mista di appagamento intellettuale e di sentito dispiacere, ed il 鈥渃hiss脿 se avesse potuto scrivere ancora e tenere queste conferenze di persona鈥� sorge spontaneo. 脠 quasi automatico, quindi, definire l'opera come il testamento spirituale di Calvino, anche per via dell'ampio respiro e della moltitudine di temi trattati da questa. E l'attualit脿 di queste lezioni sta nell'universalit脿: dell'oggetto della discussione, del linguaggio utilizzato, dei temi toccati e del pubblico a cui si rivolge Calvino.

In alcuni passaggi, l'autore diventa addirittura profetico nell'immaginare il futuro terzo millennio, che 猫 il nostro presente: dall'appiattimento ed impoverimento del linguaggio all'aumento incontrollato della frenesia nella quotidianit脿, dall'avvento di internet al potere crescente dei media, dalla virtualizzazione e dematerializzazione di ogni ambito dell'esistenza all'importanza dei social network, fino alla realizzazione delle opere ipertestuali e delle enciclopedie aperte.

Ho adorato quasi allo stesso modo tutte le lezioni. La mia preferita 猫 senza dubbio 鈥湶汛潜舫俦鸨璞艟背背倜犫€�, forse perch茅 猫 quella in cui Calvino rivolge una maggiore attenzione ai suoi contemporanei piuttosto che ai suoi predecessori, parlandoci di una letteratura che, pur avendo gi脿 illustri precedenti, era nel pieno della sua forza creativa proprio in quegli anni, e prevedendone anche gli sviluppi futuri: i romanzi-mondo, i meta-romanzi, i romanzi ibridi, gli iper-romanzi, i romanzi enciclopedici e gli sperimentalismi post-moderni. Opere ambiziose, opere che osano e che spesso fanno discutere. Forse la chiave di questo tipo di letteratura sta tutta nella seguente osservazione di Calvino: 鈥淟'eccessiva ambizione dei propositi pu貌 essere rimproverabile in molti campi d'attivit脿, non in letteratura. La letteratura vive solo se si pone degli obiettivi smisurati, anche al di l脿 d'ogni possibilit脿 di realizzazione. Solo se poeti e scrittori si proporranno imprese che nessun altro osa immaginare la letteratura continuer脿 ad avere una funzione. La grande sfida per la letteratura 猫 il saper tessere insieme i diversi saperi e i diversi codici in una visione plurima, sfaccettata del mondo鈥�.

Lezioni per studenti universitari, dunque. Ma anche lezioni per tutti, per chi ama leggere e per chi vuole scrivere; per chi vuole capire meglio lo stesso Calvino, che d脿 una chiave di lettura alle sue precedenti opere; infine, vere e proprie lezioni di vita, perch茅 i valori che la letteratura deve salvaguardare sono gli stessi che dovremmo coltivare nella nostra quotidianit脿.

Nella prima pagina di quest'opera, Calvino scrive: 鈥淟a mia fiducia nel futuro della letteratura consiste nel sapere che ci sono cose che solo la letteratura pu貌 dare coi suoi mezzi specifici鈥�. Nell'ultima pagina, si legge invece: 鈥淧er poco che sia rimasto da raccontare, si continua a raccontare ancora鈥�. In mezzo, da qualche parte: 鈥淣ell'universo infinito della letteratura s'aprono sempre altre vie da esplorare鈥�. Tre attestati di fiducia, tre dichiarazioni d'amore, nei confronti della letteratura.

Da leggere e rileggere per trovare sempre nuovi spunti di lettura e nuove chiavi interpretative; da studiare per essere lettori attivi, consapevoli ed evoluti; da imparare a memoria per le bellissime frasi e per gli insegnamenti profondi presenti tra le righe.
Profile Image for 鈽� Sono sempre vissuta nel castello Chiara.
185 reviews298 followers
May 22, 2018
Bellissimo saggio di Calvino su alcuni valori da conservare nel nuovo millennio. Oltre a tante e profonde riflessioni sullo scrivere Calvino ci parla di opere letterarie specifiche portando vari esempi, veramente illuminante in alcuni punti 猫 chiaro come Calvino fosse un fine conoscitore dell鈥檃rte del romanzo e del mondo della letteratura. Bellissimo , lo consiglio a chiunque
Profile Image for Katya.
428 reviews
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October 3, 2022
Calvino, convidado em 1984 pela Universidade de Harvard a realizar um ciclo de seis confer锚ncias (as Charles Elliot Norton Poetry Lectures) no decorrer de um ano lectivo 1985-86, oferece como produto acabado estas Seis Propostas Para o Pr贸ximo Mil茅nio. Nelas, o autor aborda sobretudo a forma liter谩ria oferecendo paralelos entre a sabedoria dos escritos cl谩ssicos e as atuais exig锚ncias do panorama liter谩rio europeu.
E f谩-lo de forma bastante intelig铆vel, sem grandes pretensiosismos, sem se tornar herm茅tico ou cansativo (penso em Umberto Eco que nunca resistia a fazer a exposi莽茫o do seu intelecto at茅 脿 exaust茫o dos leitores/ouvintes).
A validade das suas afirma莽玫es - para qualquer leitor, mesmo que leigo - reside nos valores que Calvino escolheu apontar como uma esp茅cie de testemunho para as gera莽玫es (de escritores e n茫o s贸) futuras.



LEVEZA
"Nas alturas em que o reino do humano me parece mais condenado ao peso, penso que como Perseu deveria voar para outro espa莽o. N茫o estou a falar de fugas para o sonho ou para o irracional. Quero dizer que tenho de mudar o meu ponto de vista, tenho de observar o mundo a partir de outra 贸ptica, outra l贸gica, e outros m茅todos de conhecimento e de an谩lise. As imagens de leveza que procuro n茫o dever茫o deixar-se dissolver como sonhos pela realidade do presente e do futuro..."

"...temos de recordar-nos de que se nos impressiona a ideia do mundo constitu铆do de 谩tomos sem peso 茅 porque temos experi锚ncia do peso das coisas; tal como n茫o poderiamos admirar a leveza da linguagem se n茫o soub茅ssemos admirar tamb茅m a linguagem dotada de peso."


RAPIDEZ
"O s茅culo da motoriza莽茫o imp么s a velocidade como um valor mensur谩vel, cujos recordes marcam a hist贸ria do progresso das m谩quinas e dos homens. Mas a velocidade mental n茫o se pode medir e n茫o permite compara莽玫es nem corridas, nem pode dispor os seus resultados numa perspectiva hist贸rica. A velocidade mental vale por si, pelo prazer que provoca em quem for sens铆vel a este prazer, e n茫o pela utilidade pr谩tica que dela se possa obter. Um racioc铆nio r谩pido n茫o 茅 necessariamente melhor que um racioc铆nio ponderado; pelo contr谩rio, mas comunica uma coisa especial que reside precisamente na sua prontid茫o.


贰齿础罢滨顿脙翱
"Creio que os nossos mecanismos mentais elementares se repetem desde o Paleol铆tico dos nossos antepassados que ca莽avam e apanhavam frutos atrav茅s de todas as culturas da hist贸ria humana. A palavra liga a marca vis铆vel 脿 coisa invis铆vel, 脿 coisa ausente, 脿 coisa desejada ou temida, como uma fr谩gil ponte improvisada sobre o abismo."


VISIBILIDADE
"...corremos [o risco] de perder uma faculdade humana fundamental: o poder de focar vis玫es de olhos fechados, de fazer brotar cores e formas a partir de um alinhamento de caracteres alfab茅ticos negros numa p谩gina branca, de pensar por imagens. Penso numa poss铆vel pedagogia da imagina莽茫o que habitue cada um a controlar a sua pr贸pria vis茫o interior sem a sufocar e por outro lado sem a deixar cair num confuso e passageiro fantasiar, mas permitindo que as imagens se cristalizem numa forma bem definida, memor谩vel, auto-suficiente e "ic谩stica"."


MULTIPLICIDADE
"Pode-se censurar a excessiva ambi莽茫o de prop贸sitos em muitos campos da actividade, mas n茫o na literatura. A literatura s贸 vive se se propuser objectivos desmedidos, mesmo para al茅m de qualquer possibilidade de realiza莽茫o. S贸 se os poetas e escritores se propuserem empresas que mais ningu茅m ouse imaginar, 茅 que a literatura continuar谩 a ter uma fun莽茫o. Desde que a ci锚ncia desconfia das explica莽玫es gerais e das solu莽玫es que n茫o sejam sectoriais e especializadas, o grande desafio para a literatura 茅 o de saber tecer conjuntamente os diferentes saberes e os diferentes c贸digos numa vis茫o plural e multifacetada do mundo."
Profile Image for Nate D.
1,633 reviews1,203 followers
April 11, 2012
Italo Calvino, given the meticulousness and conceptual cohesion of his storytelling, is an unsurprisingly lucid theorist as well. Among his final works, these five essays were drawn from lectures he he was prevented from delivering by his death in 1985, each covering a different literary trait he most valued. (A 6th was never written down.) Equally ordered and discursive, each offers insight into Calvino's writing (though much of it this is self-evident in the writing, as well), commentary on literary history, and useful notes on areas of consideration that should really be on any writer's mind when beginning a new work. Actually, following that prior comment, I should say these traits are SO self-evident in Calvino's writing that the direct explication of them is almost unneccessary. Not that there isn't much to value here, but only after you've already considered works like Invisible Cities and If on a Winter's Night a Traveler for yourself. The examples outshine their analysis, or any specific analysis for that matter.
Profile Image for Heba.
1,215 reviews2,996 followers
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June 15, 2019
廿賱賶 賲購丨亘賷 丕賱丕亘丿丕毓 賮賷 毓丕賱賲 丕賱兀丿亘 貙 賴匕賴 丿毓賵丞 禺丕氐丞 賱賱丕胤賱丕毓 毓賱賶 禺賲爻 賲丨丕囟乇丕鬲 丕毓丿賴丕 丕賱賰丕鬲亘 丕賱丕賷胤丕賱賷 " 丕賷鬲丕賱賵 賰丕賱賮賷賳賵" 毓賳 禺氐丕卅氐 丕丿亘賷丞 賲毓賷賳丞 賯乇賷亘丞 賲賳 賯賱亘賴 毓賱賶 丨丿 賯賵賱賴 賲丨丕賵賱丕賸 丕賳 賷囟毓賴丕 賮賶 賲賳馗賵乇 丕賱兀賱賮賷丞 丕賱噩丿賷丿丞 丕賱鬲賷 賳毓賷卮賴丕 丕賱丌賳貙 睾賷乇 丕賳賴 鬲賵賮賶 毓卮賷丞 爻賮乇賴 賱噩丕賲毓丞 賴丕乇賮賵乇丿 賱丕賱賯丕卅賴丕 賵賱賲 賷賰賳 丕鬲賲 丕毓丿丕丿 丕賱賲丨丕囟乇丞 丕賱爻丕丿爻丞...
*丕賱禺賮丞*
兀賳 鬲賰賵賳 賱睾丞 丕賱兀丿亘 禺賮賷賮丞 賰匕乇丕鬲 睾亘丕乇 賳丕毓賲 貙 睾賷賲丞 卮賮賷賮丞 賲賯丕亘賱 孬賯賱 丕賱賵丕賯毓 賵毓鬲賲鬲賴 ..賲爻鬲毓賷賳丕賸 亘丕賱丕丿亘 丕賱卮毓乇賷貙 賰賷賮 賷賲賰賳 賱禺賮丞 丕賱賱睾丞 丕賳 鬲賰賵賳 賰丕賱賵賲賷囟 賲氐丕丨亘丕賸 賱賱賲毓賳賶 賮賶 丕賱賱丨馗丞 匕丕鬲賴丕 貙 丕賵 賰丕賱亘乇賷賯 丕賱禺丕胤賮 賮賷 氐賵乇丞 亘氐乇賷丞 鬲丨賲賱 賲丿賱賵賱丕賸 乇賲夭賷丕賸 賱丕 賷賲賰賳 鬲睾丕賮賱賴..
" 毓賱賶 丕賱賲乇亍 丕賳 賷賰賵賳 賮賷 禺賮丞 丕賱胤賷乇 賱丕 丕賱乇賷卮丞"
*丕賱爻乇毓丞*
丕爻鬲賳丕丿丕賸 丕賱賶 丕賱賲賵乇賵孬丕鬲 丕賱卮毓亘賷丞貙 賳乇賶 丕賱賯氐丞 爻賷乇賵乇丞 毓賱賶 賲丿賶 丕賱夭賲賳 貙 賷賰賲賳 爻丨乇賴丕 賮賶 鬲賯賱賷氐 丕賱夭賲賳 丕賵 丕賲鬲丿丕丿賴貙 鬲賴賲賱 丕賱毓丿賷丿 賲賳 丕賱鬲賮丕氐賷賱 睾賷乇 丕賱囟乇賵乇賷丞 貙 鬲賳亘毓 賱匕鬲賴丕 賲賳 丕賱鬲賰乇丕乇 賵賲丨丕賵賱丞 鬲禺胤賷 丕賱毓賯亘丕鬲 丕賱鬲賷 鬲胤賷賱 賲賳 丕賱夭賲賳 賱丕爻鬲毓丕丿丞 丕賱賲丨亘賵亘 兀賵 丕賱卮賷亍 丕賱賲賮賯賵丿...
乇卮丕賯丞 丕賱丨乇賰丞 賵爻乇毓丞 丕賱鬲毓丕亘賷乇 賱丕 鬲賳賮賷 丕賳 鬲鬲亘毓 賯丕毓丿丞 賴丕賲丞 " 丕爻乇毓 亘鬲賲賴賱" ...
*丕賱丿賯丞*
鬲胤賵賷毓 丕賱賱睾丞 亘丿賯丞 賮賷 鬲賲孬賷賱賴丕 賱賱氐賵乇 丕賱鬲禺賷賱賷丞 丨賷孬 鬲亘丿兀 賲賳 丕賱兀卮賷丕亍 賵鬲毓賵丿 丕賱賷賴丕 貙 毓賱賶 兀賱丕 鬲賰賵賳 賵丕囟丨丞 卮賮賷賮丞 賰丕賱亘賱賵乇 賵賱賰賳 賱鬲賰賳 睾丕賲囟丞 鬲賳胤賵賷 毓賱賶 丕賱賲毓賳賶 賵賳賯賷囟賴 貙 賲賳 賴賳丕 鬲賵賱丿 賲鬲毓丞 丕賱賳氐 賵賱匕鬲賴..
" 丕賱賷爻鬲 爻賲丕亍 賲賳賯胤丞 亘睾賷賵賲 氐睾賷乇丞 兀賰孬乇 賲鬲毓丞 賲賳 爻賲丕亍 氐丕賮賷丞 噩丿丕.."
*丕賱賵囟賵丨*
賱丕 丿丕毓賷 賱賱卮毓賵乇 亘丕賱丕賱鬲亘丕爻 貙 賴賳丕 賷乇丕丿 亘丕賱賵囟賵丨 丕賳 鬲兀鬲賷 丕賱賰賱賲丕鬲 賲賰丕賮卅丞 賱賱氐賵乇 丕賱亘氐乇賷丞 丕賱鬲禺賷賱賷丞 丕賱鬲賷 鬲兀鬲賷 賮賶 丕賱賲賯丕賲 丕賱兀賵賱 賵賲賳 孬賲 鬲賯毓 鬲丨鬲 爻胤賵丞 丕賱賰賱賲丕鬲...
丕賱氐賵乇 丕氐亘丨鬲 賲禺鬲賱胤丞 賲丕 亘賷賳 鬲賱賰 丕賱鬲賷 鬲賳鬲賲賷 賱賱賲禺賷賱丞 丕賱匕丕鬲賷丞貙 丕賱鬲噩乇亘丞丕賱丨爻賷丞貙 丕賱孬賯丕賮丞貙 丕賱丕毓賱丕賲貙 丕賱毓丕賱賲 丕賱賲賮鬲賵丨 丕賱賱丕賲丨丿賵丿 ...賰賷賮 賷賲賰賳 賱賱兀丿亘 丕賱鬲禺賷賷賱賷 丕賳 賷賰賵賳 賲賲賰賳丕賸 賮賷 馗賱 賴匕丕 丕賱鬲囟禺賲 丕賱賲鬲賳丕賲賷 賱賱氐賵乇 賮賷 丨賷丕鬲賳丕 責!...
*丕賱鬲毓丿丿賷丞"
丕賳 鬲賰賵賳 丕賱乇賵丕賷丞 丕賱賲毓丕氐乇丞 賲賵爻賵毓丞 賲毓乇賮丞 鬲毓賱賵 毓賱賶 丕賱匕丕鬲 丕賱賮乇丿賷丞 賵賮賰乇丞 "丕賱兀賳丕" 貙 賱賷爻 丕賱鬲賲丕賴賷 賮丨爻亘 亘賱 兀賳 鬲賲賳丨 丨囟賵乇丕 賱賱兀卮賷丕亍 賵丕賱賰丕卅賳丕鬲 毓賱賶 丕賱爻賵丕亍 貙 賲鬲毓丿丿丞 丕賱丕氐賵丕鬲 賵丕賱賳睾賲丕鬲 ...
丕禺賷乇丕賸 ..丕毓鬲賯丿 丕賳 丕賱丕亘丿丕毓 賱丨馗丞 丕賳禺胤丕賮丞 賲賳 廿賱賴丕賲 賷賯亘囟 毓賱賶 賵賲賷囟 丕賱兀賮賰丕乇 貙 賷賵氐賱 亘毓囟賴丕 亘亘毓囟 貙 賱鬲鬲丿賮賯 丨乇賵賮 爻賵丿丕亍 毓賱賶 氐賮丨丞 亘賷囟丕亍 貙 鬲氐賳毓 毓丕賱賲丕賸 賲賲賰賳丕賸 賲賳 丕賱禺賷丕賱 賱賷賰卮賮 毓賳 丕賱氐賲鬲 丕賱賲鬲賵丕乇賷 亘賷賳 囟噩賷噩 丕氐賵丕鬲 丕賱賵丕賯毓 丕賱賱丕賲鬲賳丕賴賷丞....
丌爻賮丞 毓賱賶 丕賱廿胤丕賱丞 賮賷 丕賱賲乇丕噩毓丞 馃尫...
Profile Image for emily.
580 reviews504 followers
October 29, 2023
鈥楲eopardi鈥檚 miracle was to subtract so much weight from language that it came to resemble moonlight. The many appearances of the moon in his verse take up only a handful of lines, but they suffice to bathe whole poems in its light or to cast upon them the shadow of its absence.鈥�

Almost felt like I finished this too quickly (even though I definitely read it with a deliberately and very consciously slower pace), and I want to immediately re-read it, even though I know I should probably wait a while if I want to actually 鈥榞et鈥� a better/fuller second experience (lest my still too 鈥榝resh鈥� impression of the book gets muddled/befuddled with a much too 鈥榥ew鈥� one). Brilliant collection of essays, needless to say (it lives up to its 鈥榟ype鈥� or whatever the phrase). I can see why Ali Smith had thought this to be the perfect book for 鈥榞ifting鈥�. But I think whoever is on the receiving end must be at least a bit obsessed with 鈥榣iterature鈥�, otherwise it probably won鈥檛 be of much interest to them.

鈥楾here are those who believe that words are the means of getting at the world鈥檚 substance鈥攊ts ultimate, unique, absolute substance; that rather than representing that substance, words become it (it is therefore mistaken to call them a means): the word knows only itself, and no other knowledge of the world is possible. Then there are those who see the use of words as a never-ending pursuit of things, an approximation not of their substance but of their infinite variety, a brushing against their manifold inexhaustible surfaces. As Hofmannsthal said, 鈥淒epth must be hidden. Where? On the surface鈥� (Die Tiefe mu脽 man verstecken. Wo? An der Oberfl盲che). And Wittgenstein went even further: 鈥淲hat is hidden . . . is of no interest to us鈥� (Was . . . verborgen ist, interessiert uns nicht). I don鈥檛 take such a drastic view鈥擶ords connect the visible track to the invisible thing that is desired or feared, like a fragile makeshift bridge cast across the void.鈥�

鈥業f Gadda鈥檚 writing is defined by this tension between rational exactitude and frenetic deformation, these being the foundations of every cognitive process, there was in the same period another writer, Robert Musil鈥攁lso an engineer and also with a scientific and philosophical background鈥攚ho expressed the tension between mathematical exactitude and the roughness of human affairs in a completely different manner: fluid, ironic, controlled. A mathematics of single solutions鈥攖hat was Musil鈥檚 dream.鈥�

鈥樷€擫ichtenberg wrote: 鈥淚 believe that a poem about empty space could achieve great sublimity鈥� (Ich glaube, dass ein Gedicht auf den leeren Raum einer gro脽en Erhabenheit f盲hig w盲re). The universe and the void: I鈥檒l return to these two terms, between which swings the aim of literature, and which often seem to mean the same thing.鈥�

鈥楢mong Zhuang Zhou鈥檚 many virtues was his talent for drawing. The king asked him to draw a crab. Zhuang Zhou said he would need five years and a villa with twelve servants. After five years he had not yet begun the drawing. 鈥淚 need another five years,鈥� he said. The king agreed. When the tenth year was up, Zhuang Zhou took his brush and in an instant, with a single flourish, drew a crab, the most perfect crab anyone had ever seen.鈥�

鈥樷€擵al茅ry ruminates on cosmogony as a literary genre rather than as a branch of science, and he produces a brilliant refutation of the idea of a universe, a refutation that is also an affirmation of the mythic power that every image of a universe carries with it. Here, as in Leopardi, the infinite as both attractive and repellent . . . Here too cosmological speculations as literary genre, which Leopardi indulged in with some of his prose 鈥渁pocrypha鈥濃€攕uch as his 鈥淔rammento apocrifo di Stratone da Lampsaco鈥� (鈥淎pocryphal Fragment of Strato of Lampsacus鈥�), on the origin and especially the end of our world, which flattens and empties like the rings of Saturn and disperses until it burns up in the sun.鈥�

鈥樷€擫eopardi, at the age of fifteen, writes an extraordinarily erudite history of astronomy, in which, among other things, he summarises Newton鈥檚 theories. The stargazing that inspired Leopardi鈥檚 loveliest lines was not merely a lyrical motif; when he spoke of the moon, he knew exactly what he was talking about.鈥�


As some of the excerpts I鈥檝e taken from Calvino鈥檚 book might show鈥攖he side-effect of reading every few pages or so is the rather sudden urge to add a few books to one鈥檚 TBR list. Whether this is a good/bad thing, that鈥檇 probably vary from one reader to another (even though presumably not very drastically). He just introduces each one too well. And especially because they are all so relevant to the texts/ideas he is exploring. What I like about the way he does it is the fact that he focuses on the small/fine details (and usually not discussing much of the 鈥榩lot鈥�); and also very much appreciate that he is never 鈥榩reach-ey鈥� about it all. It just makes the whole thing read so much better. I suppose the more proper term would be 鈥榯one鈥�?

鈥楤orges opens his windows onto the infinite without the slightest busyness, in a style that鈥檚 utterly clear and sober and airy鈥攁s if telling stories through summaries and glimpses results in the most precise and concrete language, the inventiveness of which lies in its rhythmic variety, its syntactic movement, its unexpected and surprising adjectives. With Borges is born a literature raised to its square and at the same time a literature as the extraction of its own square root: a 鈥減otential literature,鈥� as it would be called later in France, but whose heralds may be found in Ficciones鈥�.鈥�

鈥業f Musil鈥檚 Ulrich soon resigns himself to the defeats that a passion for exactitude inevitably entails, Paul Val茅ry鈥檚 Monsieur Teste, another of the century鈥檚 great intellectual characters, never doubts the fact that the human spirit can be fulfilled in the most precise and rigorous way. And if Leopardi, poet of life鈥檚 pain, displays supreme precision in evoking indefinite sensations that cause pleasure, Val茅ry, poet of the mind鈥檚 impassive rigour, displays supreme precision in having his Monsieur Teste confront pain, making him fight against physical suffering by means of an exercise in geometric abstraction.鈥�

鈥榃e live beneath a continuous rain of images; the most powerful media do nothing but turn the world into images and multiply it with the kaleidoscopic play of mirrors鈥攊mages that are largely void of the internal necessity that ought to distinguish every image, as a form and as a meaning, as a force that lays claim to our attention, as a wealth of possible meanings. Much of this cloud of imagery dissolves immediately, like dreams that leave no trace in memory, but a sense of irrelevance and uneasiness remains.鈥�

鈥楾he taste for geometrising composition, whose history in world literature might be traced back to Mallarm茅, is rooted in the opposition, so fundamental to contemporary science, between order and disorder. The universe dissolves into a cloud of heat, it plummets helplessly into a maelstrom of entropy鈥攂ut within this irreversible process there may appear zones of order, portions of the existent that tend toward a shape, privileged points from which one may discern a design, a perspective. The literary work is one of these tiny portions in which the existent crystallises into a shape, acquires a meaning鈥攏ot fixed, not definitive, not hardened into mineral immobility, but alive, like an organism.鈥�
Profile Image for Argos.
1,192 reviews453 followers
August 18, 2020
Italo Calvino鈥檔un edebiyata ili艧kin alt谋 denemesi e艧inin 枚ns枚z眉yle sunuluyor kitapta. Harward 脺niversitesi鈥檔de bir ders y谋l谋 i莽inde (1985-6) verilmek 眉zere alt谋 konferans i莽in ald谋臒谋 davete haz谋rl谋k amac谋yla yazd谋臒谋 denemeler bunlar. Ancak Calvino be艧ini haz谋rl谋yor, alt谋nc谋ya 枚mr眉 yetmiyor. Bu alt谋 konferans谋n ba艧l谋klar谋 艧枚yle; 鈥淗afiflik鈥�, 鈥淗谋zl谋l谋k鈥�, 鈥淜esinlik鈥�, 鈥淕枚r眉n眉rl眉k鈥�, 鈥溍噊kluk鈥� ve yazamad谋臒谋 b枚l眉m 鈥淭utarl谋l谋k鈥�. Buna ra臒men bu konferanslara temel olarak yazd谋臒谋 bir metin 鈥淏a艧lamak ve Bitirmek鈥� ba艧l谋臒谋yla kitab谋n sonuna eklenerek sanki alt谋 ders tamamlanm谋艧 gibi.

鈥淗谋zl谋l谋k鈥�, 鈥溍噊kluk鈥� ve son deneme 鈥淏a艧lamak ve Bitirmek鈥� 莽ok iyi metinler. En be臒endi臒im yazarlar aras谋nda olan G. Perec鈥檌n yine en be臒endi臒im romanlar aras谋nda yeralan 鈥淵a艧am Kullanma K谋lavuzu鈥漬u 枚rnek olarak anlatmas谋 g眉zel bir s眉rpriz oldu benim i莽in. Edebiyat tarihinin unutulmaz ba艧lang谋莽lar a莽谋s谋ndan zengin oldu臒unu 枚rneklerle anlat谋rken buna kar艧谋n eserletin sonlar谋n谋n ba艧ar谋 a莽谋s谋ndan 莽ok seyrek oldu臒unu ve kolay hat谋rlanmad谋臒谋n谋 saptamas谋 Calvino鈥檔un kitapta verdi臒i y眉zlerce mesajdan sadece bir tanesi.

Calvino 枚ld眉kten sonra bas谋lan kitaplar谋n adlar谋nda bir sorun var bence. Daha 枚nce yazm谋艧t谋m, biyografisini ad谋 ilgisiz bir ad , 鈥淧ariste M眉nzevi鈥�, keza Amerika notlar谋n谋n ismi 鈥淎merika鈥檇a bir 陌yimser鈥�, halbuki yazd谋klar谋 hi莽te iyimser 艧eyler de臒il, hatta kayg谋l谋, ele艧tirel yaz谋lar 莽o臒u. NewYork ve Amerika hayranl谋臒谋 ba艧ka bir 艧ey ve onu iyimser k谋lmaz. Bu kitap ad谋 da ayn谋 tutars谋zl谋kta . 鈥淕elecek Biny谋l 陌莽in Alt谋 脰neri鈥� alt ba艧l谋臒谋yla 鈥淎merika Dersleri鈥� olarak bas谋lm谋艧. Ne ikibinli y谋llar i莽in herhangi bir 枚nerisi var yazar谋n (politik, ekonomik, k眉lt眉rel, bilimsel vd), ne de yaz谋lanlar Amerika鈥檡a ili艧kin dersler.

B眉t眉n yazd谋klar谋ma ra臒men bu kitab谋 edebiyatla ilgilenen, yazmak, 枚zellikle 枚yk眉 yazmak isteyenler i莽in 莽ok yararl谋 notlar ve deneyimler ta艧谋mas谋 nedeniyle kesinlikle 枚neririm.
Profile Image for Kuszma.
2,699 reviews256 followers
January 24, 2023
"Az irodalom csak akkor 茅l, ha t煤lm茅retezett c茅lokat k枚vet, ak谩r a lehet艖s茅gek hat谩r谩n t煤liakat is. Szerep茅t csak akkor 艖rizheti meg, hogyha a k枚lt艖k 茅s az 铆r贸k olyan v谩llalkoz谩sokba fognak, melyekre m谩s gondolni sem mer."

碍枚苍苍测别诲蝉茅驳.
骋测辞谤蝉补蝉谩驳.
笔辞苍迟辞蝉蝉谩驳.
碍茅辫蝉锄别谤疟蝉茅驳.
厂辞办谤茅迟疟蝉茅驳.

Ha csak a fejezetc铆meket olvassuk el, m谩r akkor is nyer眉nk n茅mi fogalmat arr贸l, Calvino milyen irodalomfelfog谩s mellett 茅rvel el艖ad谩saiban. Ugyanakkor ne v谩rjuk, hogy csak 煤gy sorj谩znak majd a falv茅d艖re val贸 egyetemes aranyk枚p茅sek. Sokkal k茅pl茅kenyebb sz枚veg ez ann谩l. K茅pl茅kenys茅ge pedig abb贸l fakad, hogy az irodalom olyasf茅le dolog, ami "t煤lm茅retezett c茅lokat" kell k枚vessen. Ha mag谩ra is tetov谩lta p茅ld谩ul a pontoss谩g eszm茅ny茅t, n茅ha meg kell k铆s茅relnie meghaladnia azt - olyan pontoss谩got kell l茅trehoznia, amir艖l addig senki nem gondolta, hogy ez is pontoss谩g. A fel眉letes (s艖t: b谩rmelyik) szeml茅l艖 k枚nnyen azt hiheti, hogy ez maga a k谩osz. Ami persze egy ellentmond谩s. Meglehet, feloldhatatlan. De a feloldhatatlan ellentmond谩sokb贸l lesz az irodalom. Ahogy a kudarc is. Na, ez is egy ellentmond谩s.

Van egy k茅p k茅tfajta felfog谩sr贸l, amit Calvino sz铆vesen vonatkoztat az irodalomra. Az egyik a krist谩ly: bonyolult, szil谩rd strukt煤ra, ami csod谩latos k茅pz艖dm茅nyt hoz l茅tre. A m谩sik a l谩ng: k铆v眉lr艖l tal谩n stabilnak hat, de bel眉l 谩lland贸 mozg谩s, v谩ltoz谩s, 枚rv茅nyl茅s. Minden 铆r贸 maga d枚nti el, melyik forma az 枚v茅. De az igaz谩n nagy 铆r贸 k茅pes 谩tj谩rni egyikb艖l a m谩sikba. Mert sok k茅rd茅se van, 茅s sehol sincs meg铆rva, hogy a v谩laszokat egy helyen tal谩lja.
Profile Image for 丕賲蹖賳 Medi.
Author听9 books101 followers
June 15, 2022
讴鬲丕亘 讴丕乇诏丕賴 賳賵蹖爻賳丿诏蹖鈥屫池�. 賳卮乇 賲乇讴夭 賲賳鬲卮乇卮 讴乇丿賴. 讴丕賱賵蹖賳賵 亘賴 丌賵乇丿賳 賲孬丕賱鈥屬囏й屰� 丕夭 丕丿亘蹖丕鬲 丕丿賵丕乇 賲禺鬲賱賮 賳賵卮鬲賳 乇丕 蹖丕丿 賲蹖鈥屫囏� 賵 鬲賵氐蹖賮 讴乇丿賳 乇丕 賵 乇賵丕蹖鬲 讴乇丿賳 乇丕. 讴鬲丕亘 賲賲賱賵 丕爻鬲 丕夭 賲孬丕賱 亘乇丕蹖 賳卮丕賳 丿丕丿賳 丨乇賮蹖 讴賴 讴丕賱賵蹖賳賵 賲蹖鈥屫操嗀� 賵 賳讴鬲賴鈥屫й� 讴賴 賲蹖鈥屫堌з囏� 噩丕 亘蹖賳丿丕夭丿. 禺賵丕賳丿賳卮 賵丕賯毓丕賸 賱匕鬲亘禺卮 丕爻鬲.
Profile Image for Kiera.
110 reviews11 followers
August 15, 2023
If you like deep thinking and abstract thoughts, you鈥檒l literally foam at the mouth for this book.

I have so many highlights in this one short book alone.
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