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The Correspondence of Fradique Mendes
Eça de Queiroz
José Maria de Eça de Queirós;
Gregory Rabassa, trans.;
Frank F. Sousa, ed.;
Anna M. Klobucka, contrib.
Introduction

A bright, witty excursion through the fictional letters of a turn-of-century dandy who hilariously edifies, entertains, infuriates, and endears

The Correspondence of Fradique Mendes—ostensibly letters, with arch introduction—actually ranges widely and revels in many forms of discourse. In this singular work originally published in 1900, one finds meditations, dialogues, observations, grand shifts in tone, occulted ironies, pastiches, lampoons, and an underlying hilarity throughout. Readers will be reminded of Ishmael’s lofty digressions, of Ivan Karamazov’s dialogues with his imaginary devil, of Flaubert’s stylistic virtuosity, of Gogol’s quiet comedy—and more. Fradique, at one point, disingenuously tells us he will never write a book because no language is capable of representing the real significance of anything. But Fradique’s letters go on to offer us nearly everything, and they presciently anticipate much of what is rightly celebrated in the best of post-modern writing. A magnificent novel in a beautiful and deft translation that will entertain and delight with wit, intelligence and many surprises.

José Maria de Eça de Queirós (1845-1900), Portugal’s foremost author of the nineteenth century and its most celebrated novelist before José Saramago.

Highlights
  • 2011 — 152 pages — Paper
    ISBN: 978-1-933227-32-0
  • Cover of the volume Click here