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The Lives of Things
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
6 posts | 2 read | 1 reading | 3 to read
The Lives of Things collects Jos Saramagos early experiments with the short story form, attesting to the young novelists imaginative power and incomparable skill in elaborating the most extravagant fantasies. Combining bitter satire, outrageous parody and Kafkaesque hallucinations, these stories explore the horror and repression that paralyzed Portugal under the Salazar regime and pay tribute to human resilience in the face of injustice and institutionalized tyranny. Beautifully written and deeply unsettling, The Lives of Things illuminates the development of Saramagos prose and records the genesis of themes that resound throughout his novels.
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Bookwomble
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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Pickpick

Difficult in parts, but well worth perseverance. The writing flows and the images Saramago conjures are by turns dark and magical.
The first story, "The Chair", I found hard to grasp initially, until I caught the allegory and it fell into place.
"Embargo" satirises our reliance on oil and motor vehicles in a disturbing Twilight Zone-esque way.
"Reflux" is about the futile denial of mortality, and inequality even in death (and probably other ⬇️

Bookwomble ... things I didn't catch).
"Things" is dystopian sci-fi, which reveals itself to be a damning critique of authoritarianism, popular collusion with fascism, and political disappearances. This is the best story, I think.
"The Centaur" is a lovely, sad fantasy of the loneliness of the last Centaur, survivor of the ancient battle with the Lapiths.
"Revenge" has the final few pages; same beautiful language, no idea what the point was.
5 ⭐
2y
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Bookwomble
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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"The chair started to fall, to come crashing down, to topple, but not, strictly speaking, to come to bits."

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

review
Bookwomble
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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Pickpick

Despite my previous flippant comment about the first story, "The Chair", it was actually really good, if you like things held at an odd angle. Undoubtedly, my enjoyment of the story was enhanced by spending twice as much time reading Wikipedia entries on President Salazar, Saramago, libertarian communism and the Carnation Revolution (mostly to be forgotten by tomorrow) than I spent on the story itself. I like those kind of stories ?

Jari-chan I actually love books that make one google things. Even if they're forgotten soon, the knowledge is still somewhere in one's brain. 2y
Suet624 @Jari-chan completely agree with you. 2y
TieDyeDude I need to read more of his stuff, and so I shall. Just grabbed one of my shelf to start next 😅 2y
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Bookwomble @TieDyeDude I've only read his childhood memories and the tagged; the latter I particularly enjoyed. These short stories have mixed reviews, but I think they're really good, so definitely more Saramago for me! What have you picked up off your shelf? 2y
TieDyeDude All the Names. I've only read Blindness so far, but because of it, I bought several of his books over the years. Blindness was the first, and maybe only, book I reread as soon as I finished it the first time. 2y
Bookwomble I'm sure you'll enjoy All the Names. I ordered Blindness this morning 😊 2y
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blurb
Bookwomble
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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The first of these short stories is describing in minute detail the collapse of a chair. Luckily, the short introduction explained that this is Saramago's metaphor for the collapse of the long Salazar dictatorship of Portugal, which ended when the president suffered a brain haemorrhage from the impact of his skull with the floor when falling from his collapsing deck chair. 'Cos otherwise, it's 25 pages about a chair falling over.

review
Adventures_of_a_French_Reader
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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Pickpick

I really enjoyed Saramago's writing style. I absolutely loved the short stories Embargo, Reflux, and Things. They just captivated me. It's a peculiar book that is worth being read.

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Yamich49
The Lives of Things | Jos Saramago
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#bookmail! Ordered this book of short stories during a sale around Christmas, excited to read it!