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The Invention of Morel
 
 

The Invention of Morel (Paperback)

de Adolfo Bioy Casares (Author), Jorge Luis Borges (Contributor), Suzanne Jill Levine (Introduction), Ruth L.C. Simms (Translator) "TODAY, on this island, a miracle happened: summer came ahead of time ..." En savoir plus
4.3étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (3 évaluations de client)
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Review

"The masterpiece among Bioy Casares' short, intense novels is The Invention of Morel, a book that won raves from Borges (who placed it alongside Franz Kafka's The Trial), was called "perfect" by Octavio Paz, and inspired one of French cinema's most infamous moviesf, Last Year at Marienbad (1961). Though it was published in 1940, the book's continuing relevance was recently proven when it was featured on Lost -- a cameo many viewers perceive as a key to that TV show's plot. But that doesn't mean this is a tough tract unfit for quality beach time... Just know that Morel is a poetic evocation of the experience of love, an inquiry into how we know one another, and a still-relevant examination of how technology has changed our relationship with reality. It's also a great read -- one you'll be pressing into the hands of your fellow beach-goers." --Boldtype


Review

"The masterpiece among Bioy Casares' short, intense novels is The Invention of Morel, a book that won raves from Borges (who placed it alongside Franz Kafka's The Trial), was called "perfect" by Octavio Paz, and inspired one of French cinema's most infamous moviesf, Last Year at Marienbad (1961). Though it was published in 1940, the book's continuing relevance was recently proven when it was featured on Lost — a cameo many viewers perceive as a key to that TV show's plot. But that doesn't mean this is a tough tract unfit for quality beach time... Just know that Morel is a poetic evocation of the experience of love, an inquiry into how we know one another, and a still-relevant examination of how technology has changed our relationship with reality. It's also a great read — one you'll be pressing into the hands of your fellow beach-goers." --Boldtype

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4.3étoiles sur 5 (3 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Baring, Bizarre, Beautiful., Fév 4 2009
I've never read anything quite like this. This is a science fiction novel written by Bioy Casares in 1940. Borges (himself one of the most imaginative writers known today) felt it could, without exaggeration, be referred to as 'the perfect novel'. Written in the first person - from the perspective of a fugitive having escaped to a deserted island - the story depicts his experiencing of increasingly strange sights and phenomena, as well as his gradual ascertainment of the truth behind them.

The emphasis placed on Louise Brooks in the former two reviews is, I think, overstated (the NYRB edition of this work also portrays Brooks on the cover; I think this is a really misleading representation of the story, its setting, and what it's about). While Brooks did purportedly serve as the inspiration for the central female character of the story, that is where the association ends - there is no real resemblance whatsoever between Brooks and the enigmatic, empty female character in the novel who is really just an extension of its bizarre science fiction/fantasy setting (I think it's more accurate to say that the author's admiration of Brooks served as an inspiration for the relationship between the story's narrator and this enigmatic female character; the former reviewer suggested something similar).

Since obsessions with hollywood actors have become quite trite in our society, I think dwelling on the author's infatuation with the famous actress in one's review of this book glosses over Bioy-Casares' immense creativity and originality in terms of the uneasyness/bizarreness of the story and the stark, anguishing consciousness of its narrator.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 a good book, Déc 16 2003
Par Gulley Jimson (Bethesda, MD) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
I picked up this book because of the rather extravagant praise from Borges and Paz. Apparently it was inspired by the silent film star Louise Brooks, which makes sense: the entire book is about our capacity to love phantoms. All of us probably remember early infatuations with celebrities who never existed for us as anything but reproductions: on paper, televisions, the movie screen.

Essentially, this book imagines what happens when the reproductions become faithful enough to be indistinguishable from the real thing. It is narrated by a man hiding from the police on a deserted island for an undisclosed crime. One day people appear, and the man quickly falls in love with one of the women; strangely enough, they often disappear for short stretches of time, and seem to repeat the same conversations and actions again and again.

All of this is well-written, but when the explanation is given, all that preceded seems to have been time spent waiting for the a-ha twist: it's only after this point that the book becomes really interesting. I won't give away the story, because the plot is worth getting through yourself: let me mention something that it reminded me of, though.

When Apocalypse Now: Redux came out, they restored scenes of Martin Sheen's brief love affair with a French woman on the river, a storyline completely left out of the original cut. The actress, now an old woman, went to the theatres and saw herself young and beautiful again. And something about her youth is now eternal, or at least as eternal as film proves to be.

I find it completely plausible, for example, that one could find a bundle of old home videos and be so charmed by a woman in them (since I'm a man) that you fall in (some sort of) love with her, even though she is probably either dead now or a completely different woman. But in some way the image of her is real, in the sense that it exists on the tapes and in your own head.

These are some of the ideas that this book plays with and, I must say, it is more fascinating for the ideas it provokes than the narrative itself. In many ways, it feels like second-rate Borges: The Circular Ruins (or a few other stories) stretched to novella length. What Casares should have accomplished with this length is given Faustine (the woman) some sort of character that seemed worthy of the reader's love, and not just the narrator's. At the moment she's a non-entity.

So this story isn't heartbreaking, as the other reviewer (whose flimsy review, frankly, shows no evidence that he actually read the book) tries to say. The Invention of Morel is the work of a talented but not brilliant writer. Perhaps another flaw of this book is that the ideal medium for the story seems to be film; I can see why this was, supposedly, the inspiration for Last Year at Marienbad.

In any case, if these ideas strike you as interesting, I recommend this book. It's really very short, and perhaps not worth paying this much for, since I wouldn't care to have it as part of my permanent collection; I read it first in the library, where it had several short stories from Bioy (NYRB might have included those) as well as several lovely woodcut illustrations.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Mind out of time, Sep 20 2003
Par Jay Dickson (Portland, OR) - Voir tous mes commentaires
Bioy's masterpiece really is a wonderful "unknown masterpiece" (albeit unknown only in the USA) reissued by the NYRB editors. Inspired by Bioy's obsession with the silent movie actress Louise Brooks, THE INVENTION OF MOREL is a tour de force and exceptionally prescient study of the nature of reality and how it is impinged upon by the virtual realities engendered by time, fantasy, and love. And it is genuinely heartbreaking.
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