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When a Titan Is Snubbed – Nick Pompella

I am not a scholar of Jorge Luis Borges, the Argentine author who co-founded the genre called “magical realism.” I have never read his private letters, or taken graduate courses, or published critical analyses of his work in some unread peer-reviewed journal. But Borges is one of the rare authors in which knowing less about him may benefit the reader, and may even enhance one’s fascination with his stories. That is the only expertise I can truly claim on this topic: I love Borges’ work. 

Probably Borges’ most “straightforward” (if I could use multiple pairs of scare quotes, I would) story turned 50 this year. The Book of Sand follows a kind of facsimile of Borges himself—a literary scholar, nearly blind, living in a nondescript Buenos Aires neighborhood. He hears a knock on the door of his fourth-floor apartment and finds a salesman who, at first glance, seems to be prematurely aged. Our protagonist instantly revises this assessment and says that the salesman’s shock of light hair was in fact blond, but seemed “in a Scandinavian sort of way, almost white.” He then tells us this man was from the Scottish Orkney Islands. 

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