Jorge Luis Borges is inarguably the most influential Latin-American essayist and short-story writer of our time. To spend a few hours in [his] company, even on the page, is a civilized entertainment not to be missed⌠[Borges] emphasizes the power of poetry to work its magic⌠I would have given a lot to have been at Harvard in the audience when this courtly man of letters looked âupward with gentle and shy expression on his face, seeming to materially touch the world of the textsâ and spoke about the poems and books he loved most.
- Michael Dirda, Washington Post Book World
Anything written by Borges glowsâŚwith an unearthly light that transforms the world into a plushly furnished drawing room crammed with knicknacks and dusty, leather-bound volumes of arcana⌠Almost every casual aside from Borges suggests a book of its own; this one is a wondrously limpid testament to the pleasures of reading.
- Steven Poole, The Guardian
If few writers in history have been as prodigiously learned as Borges, certainly none wore their learning so lightly or humbly⌠[The lectures] display the eloquence and erudite, offhand wit familiar from his writings as well as a charming, plainspoken modesty.
New Yorker
Whatâs most astonishing about these previously uncollected essaysâŚis that for all their complexity and elusiveness they are oral performances. While Borgesâs blindness is a major figure in his writing, the breadth and density of his rhetorical web obscures the fact that he has no notes to read, that he is calling these texts up from the inexhaustible abyss of his memory⌠In his decomposition of genres and styles, Borges provokes language to express this immanent word-magic, knitting his own pronouncements together with the primordial force of oral composition. Borges speaks on metaphor, bringing the tangled, sensuous allegories of San Juan de la Cruz into contact and concert with the cold, salty kennings of the Norse Eddas. He discusses translation with freshness and an uncanny sensitivity to the ligatures among the languages; he considers the narrative arc and the transformation of thought into poetry⌠As editor Calin-Andrei Mihailescu puts it in his graceful afterword to this volume, âLiterature,â for Borges, âwas a mode of experience.â
- Matthew Battles, Hermenaut
What if one of the giants of twentieth century literature rose from the dead and told you how he read and thought about poetry? The closest you may come to such a living-room epiphany is <i>This Craft of Verse</i>âŚa set of allocutions that, as one can hear on these four discs, delighted as much as dazzled their audience⌠Like reading his work, listening to Borges offers the opportunity to think, muse, and marvel⌠The chance to be in the auditorium while the nearly blind librarian of Babel speaks from his heart is a technological wonder that should not be missed.
- Eric Lorberer, Rain Taxi
These newly released transcripts display a literary giant, managing from beneath heavy academic robes to keep the spryness and serendipity of literature alive⌠Here Borges daydreams aloud, and the result is wonderfully disarming.
- Carlin Romano, Boston Globe
The first lecture, âThe Riddle of Poetryâ, begins with Borges, ever humble, apologising. âI have only my perplexities to offer you,â he says. Confidently pulling examples from De Quincey, Keats and Whitman to Plato and the Koran, Borges builds a case that poetry is around us and that beauty lies in the freshness of it⌠After moments of erudition and great beauty, Borges ends his 43-minute lecture humbly, excusing it as âfumbling and awkwardââa view not shared by the applauding audience. Hearing them I felt I was there, in that vast auditorium more than 30 years ago. âThe Metaphorâ, the second lecture, is more playful and looser, as Borges wonders why people use the same stock metaphors when âevery word is a dead metaphorââthis statement, of course, is a metaphor. This feeds naturally into discussing the epic in âThe Telling of the Taleâ. This lecture is Borgesâs call to action⌠Lectures four and five, âWord-Music and Translationâ and âThought and Poetryâ, given the following spring, are the most academic of the series. Borges speaks with great vigour on the problems of verse translation and the form and source of poetry⌠It is the final lecture, however, that is the most intriguing. In âA Poetâs Creedâ Borges traces his development as a writer from the age of seven, in his fatherâs library, and delves into the sources of his own poetry⌠The greatest joy in this last lecture comes from Borges himself. In the others he was erudite and intriguing but here he is also witty and puckish.
- Paul Sullivan, Financial Times
Readers who fret they donât âgetâ everythingââsignificantâ readers with no allowance for sound, rhythm, revelationâwould benefit from Jorge Luis Borgesâ [lectures]⌠Even in these scholarly lectures, given without notesâŚthere is so much assumption and conjecture, there are so many gaps to fill, that Borges seems to be creating at once the authors and the ideas and the texts heâs quoting⌠But there is also in <i>This Craft of Verse</i> the small pleasure of watching a wordsmith seek the joy of minutiae, the nitty-gritty of lex.
- Orlando Aloma, Miami Herald
In <i>This Craft of Verse</i>, [Borges] discusses some of his favorite texts, conducting a literary journey that began in his fatherâs library in Buenos Aires⌠Borgesâs ultimate gift is his unwavering belief in the world of dreams and ideas, the sense that life is âmade of poetry.â
- Micaela Kramer, New York Times Book Review
If any writer could publish from the grave, youâd expect it to be Borges: master fabulist, patron of paradox, imaginative rebel, gentle tour guide to lifeâs labyrinths. By a kind of librarianâs magic, long-lost tapes of the great Argentine poet and short-story writerâs 1967â68 Norton Lectures at Harvard turned up a few years ago in a vault. NowâŚthese newly released transcripts display a literary giant, managing from beneath heavy academic robes to keep the spryness and serendipity of literature alive⌠An appealing aspect of these meditations is Borgesâ humility, always distinctive even after he became one of the worldâs most esteemed high-cultural figuresâŚHis views will delight.
- Carlin Romano, Philadelphia Inquirer
Few have dedicated themselves to literature with the purity of Jorge Luis Borges, so the discovery of the text of his Harvard University Norton Lectures for 1967â68, now published as <i>This Craft of Verse</i>, is cause for celebration. Common sense and radical insight flow in equal measure here: <i>This Craft of Verse</i> will inspire young and old alike to follow the muses. And now, more than 30 years later, one can actually listen to the lectures: in a 4-CD set, the words of the master come thrillingly alive in his own voice.
- Tom DâEvelyn, Providence Sunday Journal
Borges puts you at ease and enchants you from the word go with his ability to get you thinking through a range of topics⌠This is perhaps ideal reading, in that it consists of short concise chapters that amuse, challenge and make you review the way you look at literature, translation, metaphors, art, writing, and indeed Life and Death.
British Bulletin of Publications
Whether Borgesâs topic is a metaphor, epic narrative, or the nature of poetry, his basic aim is to reproduce the experience of wonder that poetry inspires. Accordingly, he shies away from poetic theories and instead allows his examples and personal impressions to speak for themselvesâŚthe value of these lectures lies in their frequent success at conveying the passions and joys in the experience of artfully arranged words.
- Thomas Hove, Review of Contemporary Fiction
The lectures are immediate, intimate, and timeless, the texts retaining the highly personal flavor of Borgesâs original addresses⌠Each lecture is followed by notes identifying and expanding on the rich allusions and illustrations employed in the text.
Translation Review
Borges started to make a living by lecturing after overcoming the shyness that made him stutter, marring his early years. Although he never lost entirely the fear of large audiences, he managed to make a master form out of the public lecture genre. Some of his best essays were first delivered as talks, mostly in the English tradition of confession, wit, and eloquence. This performance of intelligent intimacy with the audience gave his rich commentary and bright summation a conversational tone and the poignancy of a revelation. Borges had an epiphanic view of reading, and to him literature was a memory of the exceptional. These lectures have that elegance and edge, indeed the beauty of the best possible library on the happiest of islands.
- Julio Ortega, Brown University,