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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Modest but Winning, June 21, 2006
Eduardo Galeano's lyrical and poetic literary style floats like a butterfly; when his subjects are the political and social outrages of history, it can also sting like a bee. In his earlier works this combination is extremely potent: one is given one's historical instruction in small but powerful installments, always keyed to the individual, close to the ground, intimate. Then all the more memorable for their emotional wallop. When his subjects are the powerful and unscrupulous, Galeano knows how to draw blood, but in the courtliest way, with surgical precision and surprise.
Most of the small narratives (some only a paragraph) in "Voices of Time" show us Galeano at his gentlest. Like Borges he's an ironist, the significances and twists and turns in his tales giving heft to their brevity. A few detail the trademark social and economic outrages that comprised the history of Latin America and the Third World generally, but many involve Galeano's friends, pets, family, non-political occurences and observations. If you remember Paul Harvey's short radio biographies (revealing the name of his subject only in the last sentence), you'll have an idea of a favorite Galeano technique.
If you've never read Galeano before, I'd recommend his earlier books over this one, "Upside Down" or "Century of the Wind;" you'll then see why he's considered one of Latin America's greatest journalist-historians. But if you're a Galeano fan and are wondering whether this volume is worthwhile, please consider this a rave. "Voices of Time" is a modestly scaled work, grandfatherly in tone, but given its intentions, perfect.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A beautiful and lyrical book, July 7, 2006
Eduardo Galeano is possibly one of the most important writers working in today's marketplace. His committments to idealogical matters, his belief in poetry, his unique narrative voice, his willingness to speak out again oppression -- all of these make him a strong and vital writer.
His prose is tremendous. Buy this book! Then, buy the Book of Embraces, Memory of Fire, and Soccer in Sun and Shadow. I've loved his work for years, and every new book is a joy.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Further Ruminations by Uruguay's Galeano, July 8, 2006
For readers who bask in the repeated perusals of Eduardo Galeano's books, such as the endlessly entertaining and informing 'Centuries of the Wind', then buying and reading 'Voices in Time: A Life in Stories' will come as no surprise. Galeano's Spanish thoughts are beautifully translated by Mark Fried and as is the case in all translations of books of other languages, the translator owns a significant portion of the success of the book.
Galeano continues his idiosyncratic manner of writing in brief bits and pieces of thoughts, responses, fits of anger, musings on beauty, and responses to the world in which we struggle to live. The short 'stories' contained in this volume began as newspaper quips and the 'VOICES OF TIME' is more a compendium of various excerpts rather than a novel. Galeano writes with mischief, humor, rancor, anger, and philosophical views about subjects that range form global importance such as the war in Iraq, the vanishing species of our planet, of poets (Isaac Asimov and Rafael Alberti) and of family and friends.
At times the brevity of Galeano's style can become annoying (there are 333 stories in this book of almost the same number of pages!), and the quality of what he has to contribute on his subjects varies from invigorating to dull excesses. But for those who love Galeano's lyrical style of dropping petals on the surface of the pond that serves as the matrix for thought, VOICES OF TIME will not disappoint. Not as strong as his previous work, perhaps, but even mediocre Galeano is a treat! Grady Harp, July 06
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