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Loading... The Tale of the Unknown Island (1997)by José Saramago
None. Saramago's place in the alphabet at the library where I worked used to land him on the bottom shelf. It was there that this little glowing bit of romance glowed at me and built a little world in which I was left undisturbed for the 15 minutes it took to read the words on the pages between the covers. The story is a simple one: a man asks a king for a boat. It could "get more complicated from there" but that is the only real complication. Everything else is magic. I recommend this book to avid readers of almost anything, most especially readers of history, adventure, graphic novels and fans of wonderful conversation. Happy endings.... or beginnings? Then, as soon as the sun had risen, the man and the woman went to paint in white letters on both sides of the prow the name that the caravel still lacked. Around midday, with the tide, The Unknown Island finally set to sea, in search of itself. http://thingswelove2.blogspot.com/2011/06/tale-of-unknown-island.html Another reminder that quality wins over quantity: it's a tiny book (a story, a tale, really...) but it's pregnant with deep promise and many-fold meaning. And as always - Saramago's inimitable and unique style of narrative, which in itself is an unforgettable journey. Here are just a few gems from the book: "Liking is probably the best form of ownership, and ownership the worst form of liking." "We can't see ourselves unless we become free of ourselves." "If you don't step outside yourself, you'll never discover who you are." A short but meaningful story... no reviews | add a review Is contained in
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Quotes:
On fate:
“…indeed, this is the way fate usually treats us, it’s there right behind us, it has already reached out a hand to touch us on the shoulder while we’re still muttering to ourselves, It’s all over, that’s it, who cares anyhow.”
On finding oneself:
“You must have some skill, a craft, a profession, as they call it nowadays, I have, did have, will have if necessary, but I want to find the unknown island, I want to find out who I am when I’m there on that island, Don’t you know, If you don’t step outside yourself, you’ll never discover who you are…” (