cesar aira Archives - Matthew Talamini https://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/tag/cesar-aira/ Emerging Writer Mon, 18 Feb 2019 23:42:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-clouds-32x32.png cesar aira Archives - Matthew Talamini https://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/tag/cesar-aira/ 32 32 194791218 The Literary Conference https://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/review/the-literary-conference/ Tue, 19 Dec 2017 12:00:25 +0000 http://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/?p=390 The Literary Conference by César Aira My rating: 4 of 5 stars The one thing Cesar Aira does better than any other writer, as far as I can tell, is … Continue readingThe Literary Conference

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The Literary Conference

The Literary Conference by César Aira

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


The one thing Cesar Aira does better than any other writer, as far as I can tell, is give the impression that he is in perfect control; that he does exactly what he wants in his book and nobody can tell him what to do. In music, this is what Charles Mingus does. Or Captain Beefheart. It’s a great asset. He may lean on it a bit much in this one; it starts to take away from the absorption. But he’s clearly hiding deep secrets that we’ll never uncover, and the sense of fascination never goes away.

“If you’re listening to this song / You may think the chords are going wrong / But they’re not / We just wrote them like that”




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Ema, the Captive https://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/review/ema-the-captive/ Thu, 27 Jul 2017 12:00:45 +0000 http://portfolio.matthewtalamini.com/?p=353 Ema, the Captive by César Aira My rating: 5 of 5 stars I have a secret list of words that evoke vision. I should have added to it while reading … Continue readingEma, the Captive

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Ema, the Captive

Ema, the Captive by César Aira

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I have a secret list of words that evoke vision. I should have added to it while reading this, because I kept going, “Oh, that’s a good one!” Aira writes very beautifully. He makes Argentina seem like a fantastical dreamland, like Xanadu or Samarkand or El Dorado.

I think this might not be a novel, but rather a lengthy pastoral poem.

I think the key to the aesthetic of this book is that nobody in it ever needs anything. For instance, money is an important part of the book but nobody ever needs it. They smoke lots of cigarettes and drink from many different bottles, but nobody ever buys tobacco or alcohol. They hunt for food, or get it, without trading, from other people who have it. They live in houses because the houses are there, but sometimes not. Near the end Ema gets a loan to start a business, but the terms are 0.5 percent interest for 300 years; and she doesn’t need the business, and her workers don’t need jobs.

There are no diseases in this book. Even in situations where there really, really ought to be. There’s one mention of a blind man, but I’ll bet he was born that way.

It’s mostly about “Indians”, and its portrayal of them is deliberately fantastical in a way that seems to me to be more than half thought experiment; so now you know that.

Anyway, something is going on in this book and it’s mysterious in the best way. Maybe the people are all actually pheasants. No really, I actually think that might be what the book is about. It’s also possible that Ema was deeply traumatized prior to the start of the book and it’s all one years-long dissociative episode characterized by emotional detachment. Those are my two best theories.



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