Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Papyrus. L'infinito in un giunco
Papyrus. L'infinito in un giunco: La grande avventura del libro nel mondo antico | Irene Vallejo
13 posts | 9 read | 4 to read
Questo un libro sulla storia dei libri: libri di fumo, di pietra, di argilla, di giunchi, di seta, di pelle, di alberi e, ultimi arrivati, di plastica e di luce. Ma anche un libro di viaggio che percorrendo le rotte del mondo antico fa tappa tra i canneti di papiro lungo il Nilo, sui campi di battaglia di Alessandro, tra le stanze dei palazzi di Cleopatra, nella Villa dei papiri di Ercolano prima delleruzione del Vesuvio, sul luogo del delitto di Ipazia, e poi nelle scuole pi antiche dove si insegnava lalfabeto, nelle prime librerie e nei laboratori di copiatura manoscritta, fino ad arrivare davanti ai roghi dove sono stati bruciati i libri proibiti, ai gulag, allincendio della biblioteca di Sarajevo e ai sotterranei labirintici di Oxford. Papyrus un racconto personalissimo, dove lesperienza autobiografica si intreccia a evocazioni letterarie e a storie antiche, e dove un filo invisibile collega i classici con il frenetico mondo contemporaneo e i dibattiti pi attuali: Erodoto e i fatti alternativi, Aristofane e i processi agli umoristi, Tito Livio e il fenomeno dei fan, Saffo e la voce letteraria delle donne, Seneca e la post-verit. Ma questo libro soprattutto una favolosa avventura collettiva che ha come protagoniste le migliaia di persone che nel corso del tempo hanno salvato e protetto i libri: cantori, scribi, miniatori, traduttori, venditori ambulanti, insegnanti, maestri, spie, ribelli, suore, schiavi, avventurieri... lettori al riparo delle montagne o di fronte al mare in tempesta, nelle grandi capitali dove lenergia si concentra o nelle comunit pi remote dove il sapere si rifugia quando infuria il caos.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Angeles
Mehso-so

Extremely erudite and well written but it falls awkwardly between history of books, mainly in the ancient world and the author‘s memories about books and family; as well as philosophical musings about reading and life. I dislike this kind of messy book. I expected a history of books and writing in ancient times and I am not interested in the memories of the author or I would have picked a memoir.

review
jenniferw88
post image
Mehso-so
blurb
jenniferw88
post image

#bookreport

Continued Papyrus
Started and finished Chess (Story)

blurb
jenniferw88
post image

#weeklyforecast @Cinfhen

Continue these two.

review
eol
post image
Mehso-so

It‘s a 450+ pages long essay, almost a stream of consciousness. Flowing without structure but relaxing. It mixes deeply personal—autobiographical—content with well-researched history told from the POVs of people who lived it. A pleasant, well-written read.

Still, I like me some structure, so not really a pick. Not for me at least—this may end up one of those books I successfully recommend to others despite not loving it myself.

3.25/5

review
psalva
post image
Pickpick

A delightful, illuminating read. A love letter to the perseverance of books, language, and ideas which doesn‘t ignore their destruction and destructive power. It speaks to the importance of being a reader, a book lover, a story teller. Vallejo‘s writing was like the weaving of a tapestry connecting the ancient with the modern, and the reader is a thread. Warm and poetic at times, I just adored this. ⬇️

#catsoflitsy

psalva Some flaws: confusing citations at times. Also, mainly focused on western/European history and literature. With those points in mind, I still highly recommend this. Shout out to the translator, Charlotte Whittle, who does an outstanding job of conveying the poetry in Vallejo‘s writing. 2y
18 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
catiewithac
post image

Mitch, thank you for this stunning book for my birthday! It‘s a joy to hold and I love dappled edges ❤️ Thanks for remembering my special day!! 🥰 #LitsyLove

Mitch Hope you had a lovely day xxx 2y
59 likes1 comment
quote
psalva
post image

“We spend our lives making lists, reading them, memorizing them, tearing them up, throwing them into the trash, crossing off the things we‘ve done, loving and loathing them. The best lists are those that recognize their items‘ importance and try to give them meaning. Those that embrace the details and the uniqueness of the world, preventing us from losing sight of what matters.”

quote
psalva
post image

Leaving aside the pesky use of he/him pronouns which I would guess stems from the translation from Spanish, this description of reading a scroll really got my imagination going. The imagery in this book is so effective, and I feel like I‘m connecting to the history more fully. I can also tell how much Vallejo as the author loves her subject.

quote
Paus0312

“Los libros tienen voz y hablan salvando épocas y vidas. Las librerías son esos territorios mágicos donde, en un acto de inspiración, escuchamos los ecos suaves y chisporroteantes de la memoria desconocida.”

quote
Paus0312

“En cierto sentido, todos los lectores llevamos dentro íntimas bibliotecas clandestinas de palabras que nos han dejado huella.”

quote
Paus0312

“Esa sabiduría nos susurra que la humilde,imperfecta y efímera vida humana merece la pena, a pesar de sus limitaciones y sus desgracias, aunque la juventud se esfume, la carne se vuelva flácida y acabemos arrastrando los pies”

review
bcncookbookclub
post image
Pickpick

An impressive story about books and people working together to make its exist. Women had an notable importance in this track and it can inspire us nowadays.
ISBN:978-84-17860-87-5, writer in the pic.

#spanishreading #irenevallejo #elinfinitoenunjunco