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Loading... Mirrors: Stories of Almost Everyone (edition 2010)by Eduardo Galeano (Author)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Si hubiera 10 estrellas, pediría 11 para este libro. Una obra imprescindible para conocer, reconocer y avergonzarse de las incongruencias e insensateces del ser humano en su devenir histórico. Un libro que emociona, indigna y entristece al contarnos una historia no oficial que nos abre los ojos permitiéndonos ver al otro desde esa visión de los vencidos donde el recuento es amargo. Un gran libro contado de forma exquisita muy propia de Galeano: un poco de poesía, un poco de reflexión, otro poco de metáfora, un mucho de sarcasmo para contar lo que somos y cómo hemos llegado hasta aquí. MIRRORS: Stories of Almost Everyone - contemporary Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano's collection of hundreds and hundreds of finely constructed mini-tales, two or three on every page, with such titles as: Origin of Fire, Origin of Beauty, Origin of Sea Breezes, Resurrection of Vermeer, Resurrection of Arcimboldo, Mozart, Goya, Venus, Hokusai, Kipling, Nijinsky, Beethoven, Lenin, Invisible Men, Invisible Women, Palace Art in France, Origin of the Croissant, Darwin’s Questions, The Gold Rush and The Insanity of Freedom. Reading this book is like eating peanuts – once you start, it’s hard to stop; not to mention, once you’ve opened your heart and mind, you will want to open even wider. By way of a sampling, here are several of my favorites, featuring Eduardo’s signature caustic wit and nods to the power of human magical imagination: ORIGIN OF WRITING When Iraq was not yet Iraq, it was the birthplace of the first written word. The words look like bird tracks. Masterful hands drew them in clay with sharpened canes. Fire annihilates and rescues, kills and gives life, as do the gods, as do we. Fire hardened the clay and preserved the words. Thanks to fire, the clay tablets still tell what they told thousands of years ago in that land of two rivers. In our days, George W. Bush, perhaps believing that writing was invented in Texas, launched with joyful impunity a war to exterminate Iraq. There were thousands upon thousands of victims, and not all of them were flesh and blood. A great deal of memory was murdered too. Living history in the form of numerous clay tablets were stolen or destroyed by bombs. One of the tablets said: We are dust and nothing All that we do is no more than wind. PELE Two British teams were battling out the championship match. The final whistle was not far off and they were still tied, when one player collided with another and fell, out cold. A stretcher carried him off and the entire medical team went to work, but the man did not come to. Minutes passed, centuries passed, and the coach was swallowing the clock, hands and all. He had already used up his substitutions. His boys, ten against eleven, were defending as best they could, which was not much. The coach could see defeat coming, when suddenly the team doctor ran up and cried ecstatically: “We did it!” He’s coming around!” And in a low voice, added: “But he doesn’t know who he is.” The coach went over to the player, who was babbling incoherently as he tried to get to his feet, and in his ear informed him: “You are Pelé.” They won five-nil. Years ago in London, I heard this lie that told the truth. VAN GOGH Four uncles and a brother were art dealers, yet he managed to see but one painting in his enire life. Out of admiration or pity, the sister of a friend paid four hundred francs for a work in oils, The Red Vinyard, painted in Aries. More than a century later, his works are on the financial pages of nevewspapers he never read. The priciest paintings in galleries he never set foot in, The most viewed in museums that ignored his existence, And the most admired in academies that advised him to take up another trade. Today Van Gogh decorates restaurants where no one would have served him. The clinics of doctors who would have had him committed And the offices of lawyers who would have locked him away. KAFKA As the drums of the first world butchery drew near, Franz Kafka wrote Metamorphosis. And not long after, the war under way he wrote The Trial. They are two collective nightmares. A man awakens as an enormous cockroach and cannot fathom why, and in the end he is sweept away by a broom. Another man is arrested, charged, judged, and found guilty, and cannot fathom why, and in the end he is knifed by the executioner. In a certain way those stories, those books, continued in the pages of the newspapers, which day after day told of the progress of the war machine. The author, ghost with feverish eyes, shadow without a body wrote from the ultimate depths of anguish. He published little, practically no one read him. He departed in silence, as he had lived. On his deathbed, bed of pain, he only spoke to ask the doctor: “Kill me, or else you are a murderer.” FATHER OF THE BOMB The first bomb was tried out in the desert of New Mexico. The sky caught fire and Robert Oppenheimer, who led the tests, felt proud of a job well done. But three months after the explosions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Oppenheimer said to President Harry Truman: “I feel I have blood on my hands.” And President Truman told Secretary of State Dean Acheson: “I don’t want to see that son of a bitch in this office ever again.” And please don’t simply put Eduardo’s magic mirror down; add a mirror of your own. Here is mine, a response touching on the above themes: HOW GROUNDHOGS PLAY CROQUET A psychologist by the name of Brentworth proves the high level of intelligence in animals by teaching a quartet of groundhogs how to play croquet. When the four groundhogs are proficient enough to have a game on their own, Brentworth invites his colleagues to join him on his screened-in back porch to watch as the groundhogs play on the lawn in his backyard. Brentworth chose groundhogs because of the way they can hold their mallets when they sit up on their haunches. Anyway, the groundhogs are having a good go at croquet, taking their proper turns, hitting their balls through the wickets in the proper sequence. The psychologists sit in a row and watch silently except for one man at the far end, who starts sobbing uncontrollably. After a groundhogs hits his yellow ball through a wicket from a decided angle and a good twenty feed away, Brentworth shouts, “What a magnificent shot!” The groundhogs play on. The sobs from the man at the end grow louder and his body heaves. “You all don’t know what this means,” he says between heaves. After completing their game, as a sort of grand finale, the groundhogs hit all the croquet balls one by one so the balls knock against one another and form a neat row. Until now, nobody has noticed that a different white letter is painted on each of the seven brightly colored wooden ball. The lineup of balls now spells a word for all to read: ‘CROQUET”. “How clever, how very, very clever,“ one psychologist says. The man on the end, who is still sobbing, says, “This is terrible! No one understands what this means!” Everyone turns to look at him and he buries his face in his hands as his sobs grow even louder. MIRRORS: Stories of Almost Everyone - contemporary Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano's collection of hundreds and hundreds of finely constructed mini-tales, two or three on every page, with such titles as: Origin of Fire, Origin of Beauty, Origin of Sea Breezes, Resurrection of Vermeer, Resurrection of Arcimboldo, Mozart, Goya, Venus, Hokusai, Kipling, Nijinsky, Beethoven, Lenin, Invisible Men, Invisible Women, Palace Art in France, Origin of the Croissant, Darwin’s Questions, The Gold Rush and The Insanity of Freedom. Reading this book is like eating peanuts – once you start, it’s hard to stop; not to mention, once you’ve opened your heart and mind, you will want to open even wider. By way of a sampling, here are several of my favorites, featuring Eduardo’s signature caustic wit and nods to the power of human magical imagination: ORIGIN OF WRITING When Iraq was not yet Iraq, it was the birthplace of the first written word. The words look like bird tracks. Masterful hands drew them in clay with sharpened canes. Fire annihilates and rescues, kills and gives life, as do the gods, as do we. Fire hardened the clay and preserved the words. Thanks to fire, the clay tablets still tell what they told thousands of years ago in that land of two rivers. In our days, George W. Bush, perhaps believing that writing was invented in Texas, launched with joyful impunity a war to exterminate Iraq. There were thousands upon thousands of victims, and not all of them were flesh and blood. A great deal of memory was murdered too. Living history in the form of numerous clay tablets were stolen or destroyed by bombs. One of the tablets said: We are dust and nothing All that we do is no more than wind. PELE Two British teams were battling out the championship match. The final whistle was not far off and they were still tied, when one player collided with another and fell, out cold. A stretcher carried him off and the entire medical team went to work, but the man did not come to. Minutes passed, centuries passed, and the coach was swallowing the clock, hands and all. He had already used up his substitutions. His boys, ten against eleven, were defending as best they could, which was not much. The coach could see defeat coming, when suddenly the team doctor ran up and cried ecstatically: “We did it!” He’s coming around!” And in a low voice, added: “But he doesn’t know who he is.” The coach went over to the player, who was babbling incoherently as he tried to get to his feet, and in his ear informed him: “You are Pelé.” They won five-nil. Years ago in London, I heard this lie that told the truth. VAN GOGH Four uncles and a brother were art dealers, yet he managed to see but one painting in his enire life. Out of admiration or pity, the sister of a friend paid four hundred francs for a work in oils, The Red Vinyard, painted in Aries. More than a century later, his works are on the financial pages of nevewspapers he never read. The priciest paintings in galleries he never set foot in, The most viewed in museums that ignored his existence, And the most admired in academies that advised him to take up another trade. Today Van Gogh decorates restaurants where no one would have served him. The clinics of doctors who would have had him committed And the offices of lawyers who would have locked him away. KAFKA As the drums of the first world butchery drew near, Franz Kafka wrote Metamorphosis. And not long after, the war under way he wrote The Trial. They are two collective nightmares. A man awakens as an enormous cockroach and cannot fathom why, and in the end he is sweept away by a broom. Another man is arrested, charged, judged, and found guilty, and cannot fathom why, and in the end he is knifed by the executioner. In a certain way those stories, those books, continued in the pages of the newspapers, which day after day told of the progress of the war machine. The author, ghost with feverish eyes, shadow without a body wrote from the ultimate depths of anguish. He published little, practically no one read him. He departed in silence, as he had lived. On his deathbed, bed of pain, he only spoke to ask the doctor: “Kill me, or else you are a murderer.” FATHER OF THE BOMB The first bomb was tried out in the desert of New Mexico. The sky caught fire and Robert Oppenheimer, who led the tests, felt proud of a job well done. But three months after the explosions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Oppenheimer said to President Harry Truman: “I feel I have blood on my hands.” And President Truman told Secretary of State Dean Acheson: “I don’t want to see that son of a bitch in this office ever again.” And please don’t simply put Eduardo’s magic mirror down; add a mirror of your own. Here is mine, a response touching on the above themes: HOW GROUNDHOGS PLAY CROQUET A psychologist by the name of Brentworth proves the high level of intelligence in animals by teaching a quartet of groundhogs how to play croquet. When the four groundhogs are proficient enough to have a game on their own, Brentworth invites his colleagues to join him on his screened-in back porch to watch as the groundhogs play on the lawn in his backyard. Brentworth chose groundhogs because of the way they can hold their mallets when they sit up on their haunches. Anyway, the groundhogs are having a good go at croquet, taking their proper turns, hitting their balls through the wickets in the proper sequence. The psychologists sit in a row and watch silently except for one man at the far end, who starts sobbing uncontrollably. After a groundhogs hits his yellow ball through a wicket from a decided angle and a good twenty feed away, Brentworth shouts, “What a magnificent shot!” The groundhogs play on. The sobs from the man at the end grow louder and his body heaves. “You all don’t know what this means,” he says between heaves. After completing their game, as a sort of grand finale, the groundhogs hit all the croquet balls one by one so the balls knock against one another and form a neat row. Until now, nobody has noticed that a different white letter is painted on each of the seven brightly colored wooden ball. The lineup of balls now spells a word for all to read: ‘CROQUET”. “How clever, how very, very clever,“ one psychologist says. The man on the end, who is still sobbing, says, “This is terrible! No one understands what this means!” Everyone turns to look at him and he buries his face in his hands as his sobs grow even louder.
As in his previous books, he succeeds in capturing the bottomless horror of the state’s capacity to inflict pain on the individual, offering as effective an act of political dissent as exists anywhere in contemporary literature. Is contained inAwards
The unofficial history of the world seen--and mirrored to us--through the eyes and voices of history's unseen, unheard, and forgotten, over 5000 years of history. No library descriptions found.
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Because each story is so short it doesn't really give a good history lesson - you obviously miss a huge amount of context and without that and because of the focus on those under-represented elsewhere stories can seem a bit samey, with people being brave and then usually getting killed. However, it gives you a great sample of the huge diversity of people and stories and places and histories out there. Most of the stories are pretty affecting, his writing style is great. There's sometimes a bit of "African mythology says" or whatever but he does make an effort at other times to properly attribute it to a group.
Honestly the biggest place it falls down is the length of each story. If they were longer it'd obviously be a very different book but it's often a bit much all at once and it tends to make really reductive stories (the someone is brave and good, gets killed thing I mentioned earlier). It's sad seeing some people take away from it that it shows humanity is just bad and it's not worth fighting injustices. I wished there were more positive stories about revolutions and stuff - he does mention some although they're often balanced out with negatives about them if they were successful. Maybe that's a bit of a pathetic want though. It is a pretty deeply affecting experience - I was really moved by some of the stories. He's a great writer and I do recommend this book if you're interested in having your eyes opened to some of those people who've been widely ignored and moved at the same time.
(As a side note: as a Marxist I feel I have to take exception to his bits on Marxism - he's obviously not hostile to it and says positive things but it's tempered with "oh they all ended in disaster". For example, he writes as if the Cultural Revolution never happened and it just went Great Leap Forward - Deng. Given he obviously focuses far far more on capitalism etc it's no big deal, it just contributes a bit to a very pessimistic/fatalistic tone and I'm being a baby) ( )