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Forbidden Territory and Realms of Strife: The Memoirs of Juan Goytisolo
 
 
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Forbidden Territory and Realms of Strife: The Memoirs of Juan Goytisolo [Paperback]

Juan Goytisolo (Author), Peter Bush (Translator)

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Book Description

July 17, 2003

This masterful two-volume autobiography first published in the mid-1980s, broke new ground in Spanish letters with its introspective sexual and emotional honesty.

For forty-five years, the expatriate Juan Goytisolo has been widely acknowledged as both Spain's greatest living writer and its most scabrous critic. In some thirty books of fiction, autobiography, essays and journalism, he has turned the Spanish language against what he derides as 'Sunnyspain', flaying the 'Hispanos' while excavating their culture's Moorish and Jewish roots.

This, his masterful two-volume autobiography first published in the mid-1980s, broke new ground in Spanish letters with its introspective sexual and emotional honesty. It charts the writer's unique journey from a Barcelona childhood violently disrupted by the Spanish civil war to student rebellion against the Francoist dictatorship and exile as a 'self-banished Spaniard' to Paris in 1956.

In Paris, Goytisolo fell in love with Monique Lange, befriended Jean Genet, and discovered his own homosexuality as he supported the struggles for Algerian independence. His passionate, iconoclastic pen spares no one, least of all himself, in this striking portrayal of politics and sexuality in twentieth-century France and Spain.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In exile since the Franco regime vilified him for his frank mixture of leftist and bisexual politics, Goytisolo (The Garden of Secrets) is a Spanish writer who left for Paris in 1956. His books, some 30 of them by now, are rife with historical metafiction, plays on his literary status and denunciations of Spain's colonizing past. This beautifully written memoir, first published in Spanish as two volumes in the 1980s, covers the first 30 or so years of Goytisolo's turbulent, cafe-centered life, stretching from the Barcelona of Fascist bombardments during the Spanish civil war to the '60s, encountering cultural heroes like Genet, Che, Castro and Cort zar along the way. Under a hail of Franco's bombs, Juan and his brother Luis, also a writer, plunge into literary activity, reveling in the contradiction that only censorious regimes, it seems, truly value literature. From then on it's all Faulkner, illicit sex and a French girlfriend. Lucking into a Parisian fashion for peninsular writers in the '50s, Goytisolo is published by Gallimard and starts hanging out on the Left Bank. This is literary history up close: from Genet's drug of choice (Nembutal) to Raymond Queneau's housekeeper or running a literary magazine (Libre) in what later became a couscous shop. Mixed in with the usual Euro-scribe's predilection for petitions and fellow-traveling are Goytisolo's adventures in what he calls the "Sotadic zone," or the world of macho Arabs who swing both ways. But style is king here, and it is wonderful, infiltrating Goytisolo's chronological narrative like one of his own characters.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

Goytisolo made sacrifices for both his literature and his politics. In a culture that now is evolved and permissive, but was then full of macho uptightness, his autobiography brought a note of total frankness.
(Edmund White )

Goytisolo writes like no-one else, except maybe Genet.
(Neil Bartlett )

… a frank and solitary writer on a crusade for truth. He’s pugnaciously honest about his personal life, which is not easy in Spain.… He’s an outsider … his own man.
(Guillermo Cabrera Infante )

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE WRITING OF genealogies, according to the ironic narrator of Biely's Petersburg, comes down to tracing the origins of well-to-do families right back to Adam and Eve. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
conversation manual, subjective authenticity, juan goytisolo
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Pablo Alcover, Vargas Llosa, North American, Simone de Beauvoir, Latin American, Barrio Chino, Lolita Soler, United States, Aunt Consuelo, Cabrera Infante, Marguerite Duras, New York, Buenos Aires, Florence Malraux, Octavio Pellissa, Aunt Rosario, Jaime Gil de Biedma, Soviet Union, Bar Club, Blanco White, Enrique Boada, Grandfather Antonio, Grandfather Ricardo, Maria Antonia, Palau Fabre
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