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Funetes' opus first published in 1976: Excerpts from Robert Coover's original review published in the New York Times November 7, 1976: "Terra Nostra" is a colossal 350,000-word opus, a kind of panoramic Hispano-American creation myth, spanning 20 centuries (more, if you count the Greek and Egyptian mythologies that help to feed it) and embracing virtually the whole of European and American (especially Mexican) culture and civilization. If "Terra Nostra" is a failure, it is a magnificent failure. Its conception is truly grand, its perceptions often unique, its energy compelling and the inventiveness and audacity of some of its narrative maneuvers absolutely breathtaking; the animated paintings, the talking mirrors, the time machines and metamorphosing mummies, the fusion of history, myth and fiction, the variations on themes and dreams, the interweaving or rich, violent, beautiful, grotesque, mysterious, even magical images--not without reason has this book been likened to a vast and intricate tapestry. Achieved or not, there are too few writers around even willing to risk the impossible, and none I know of who so intimately activates the otherwise dead space between page and reader.
| Author: | Carlos Fuentes | | Binding: | Paperback | | Dewey Decimal Number: | 863.64 | | EAN: | 9781564782878 | | Edition: | 1st Dalkey | | ISBN: | 1564782875 | | Number Of Pages: | 785 | | Publication Date: | 2003-07 |
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