|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
9 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
49 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The perfect writing,
By
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
One regrettable consequence of Garcia Marquez's fame is that Latin American literature has come to be identified exclusively with "magical realism". Everything has to be extraordinary, epic, full of tropical lust, palms, jaguars, people having sex in every corner, flying to the sky with a pineapple on their heads. But Latin America is a vast continent producing artist of universal stature, even if the rest of the world decides (to their disadvantage) to ignore all but the folkloric.Well, Juan Rulfo is a master of the highest sort and this book is NOT magical realism, but pure, hard realism. He only wrote two books, this one and "Pedro Paramo", another masterpiece which I also don't count as magical realism, although some do, as well as a few lesser works. He didn't need to write much. His is a literature worked and reworked restlessly, until reaching perfection. Every single word fits perfectly with the rest. There are no digressions, no philosophy, no theories or grand landscapes. All his tales develop in Southern Jalisco, in a poor, dry, vast, sunburned and sad land. The prose is also dry, precise, economical and to the point. The characters are ignorant, miserable, but conscious and courageous. The titles say much: "It's because we are so poor" is one of them. However, you will not find self-pity or corny sad tales. Only bits of human misery perfectly narrated. By the way, this is the first review I write for Amazon in which I use the word "perfect". Probably it won't happen again, with one or two exceptions.
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The translation is so wonderful, I wish I could read spanish,
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
Sorry, I did not buy this book from Amazon, but I will by the other Rulfo books available. I found this book in a used book store, I happened to be browsing through. I don't even know what caught my eye, but what a find. This is so beautifully written. I must admit that though I at one time had a strong interest in the Mexican Revolution, I have forgottem much of what I learned, so some of the stories were hard for me to understand in their historical context. The writing is so evocative, however, that it doesn't matter. The feeling of desolation is almost too overwhelming. I was reminded somewhat of Ernest Hemingway by the use of short declarative sentences, also I suppose because Hemingway often used Spanish phrasing in his work. The best writing, in my opinion, evokes a feeling rather than describing it. Rulfo accomplishes that amazingly.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
strange but captivating writing,
By
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
Rulfo's style, like his stories, is sparse, quiet, and often harsh. He offers disturbing tales of miserable people in barren places; yet there is also a strange beauty to be found in his work. I can think of few, if any, examples of such perfect prose. The characters--though they suffer--seem close at hand and perfectly real, and he gives the most incredible descriptions of landscapes that I have ever read in my life. It is easy to see his connection to "magical realism"--it is largely in the way he sets the tone of the stories, and in those unbelievably vivid descriptions--but his work does not fall into that category. There is no escaping the terribly blunt reality he creates.
Whether you are interested in Latin American literature or not, if you are at all interested in prose, you should read this book.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A masterpice of short stories,
By "pbeltran" (Deep inside Mexico) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
ANGST. This is the best word to describe the human landscape that Rulfo has portrayed in this collection of short stories. A lanscape of extreme sorrow that blossoms over the arid plain, where poverty, opression and ignorance intermingle with faith to shape the tragedy of the post-revolutionary rural Mexico. A tragedy that has lived over 70 years and that may help explaining the nature of the mexican people, their doings and fears. But moreover its social meanings, Juan Rulfo, has created a masterpiece of storytelling, not only at the Latin-american level, but rather as an universal gift. This is not magic realism alà Garcia Marquez or Isabel Allende. This is bare boned reality, told with the beauty and the ease that just a master can reach, in which the words mix perfectly for creating short bursts of narrative, perfectly solved stories, that will fill the mind, the mouth and the eyes of the reader with the burnt sand of the plains, with the ashes of the dead, with the tears of the desperate. If you're ready to follow Tanilo's bloody footsteps toward Talpa, to hunt toads with Macario, or to fall under the spell of Niño Anacleto's preaching, or under the spell of misterious rural Mexico, dive into the pages of this collection of short stories, and compare it with any other you have already read, and you will understand why Rulfo never writed any further. Because he almost reached perfection.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
give art a chance.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
The Burning Plains is a compilation of short stories that Juan Rulfo published on diferent publications at different times. it's also at the moment, besides his masterpiece Pedro Paramo, the only material available.The shorts stories are chilling, incledibly well written. It's superb, and the english translation more than acceptable. To me the highlights of the book are "Talpa" and "they have given us the land" (the opener on the spanish version, but some reason is not on this english edition)but the whole book is amazing. I bought this book for my girfriend as an exorsism from jennifer Wiener's "Good in Bed" I was worried about the translation but it didn't dissapoint me. the ideal way to read The Burning Plain is in spanish, but since this book is not that surreal as pedro paramo is, this tranlation works just fine. I hope this brief note helps you to choose a good book.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
How to read and love The Burning Plain, and other Stories,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
I plan in the near future to travel to Bolivia, specifically the Altiplano - I read this book a number of years ago and I can think of nothing better to complement a desolate landscape. Unfortunately I have yet to see a recent translation of this book, but nevertheless, for those who can find it, it is a highly recommended read. A symphony of screams in the void.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Hard stories of a harsh time and place,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
There are no superfluous words, nothing to ease you into the harshness. Each story begins abruptly in the midst of struggle and hardship. Each ends with death and ashes predominate, and scant resolution suggested. The lives described are marked by isolation, coercion and limited options, lived in rocky and inhospitable terrain and in exposed conditions. The writing is consistent with the scenes described, sparse, succinct and unadorned. It makes for a powerful reading experience, but not necessarily a winsome one.
1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
MCLC students,
By LASGS "Global Studies Class" (Los Angeles, Ca) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
The Burning Plain is about fifteen emotional stories. The stories give the reader a lot to think about. Many of these stories are short interesting stories that give the reader what to think about, action, sad parts, and contains nasty events when people are killed. We recommend the book to the readers because it is a very interesting book because the way many short stories are put into one book. The book will make the reader feel grossed out because in the ways some people are killed. All of these stories take place in a rural place. For, example Talpa takes place in a village as well as Luvina. In the story Macario the setting is in a house.
3 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
what? did we read the same book?,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Burning Plain: and other Stories (Texas Pan-American Series) (Paperback)
as i sit here and contemplate the eloquent reviews of "the burning plain" i continually ask myself...did we read the same book? i found this book erratic and confusing and a struggle to complete (much the same way i felt after reading "the road", but that is another story). perhaps i am just not a literati, but i want a story i can follow and characters i can relate to. guess i am just not able to get a feel for life south of the border.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
THE BURNING PLAIN AND OTHER STORIES by Juan Rulfo (Paperback - 1968)
Out of stock
| ||