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The question comes from Julio Cortázar’s landmark 1963 novel Hopscotch, the dense, elusive, streetwise masterpiece that doubles as a High Modernist choose-your-own-adventure game. Famously ...
And Hopscotch by Julio Cortázar. Hopscotch (originally published in 1963; translated into English in 1966) is probably a young person's book. Argentinian émigrés in 1950s Paris have long ...
In his 1952 short story “Axolotl,” a reader may find the central fulcrum on which the worlds of Julio Cortázar turn ... extended paraphrase of his novel Hopscotch, says: “[K]eep in mind ...
Julio Cortázar (1914-1984 ... Cortázar’s best-known novel is “Rayuela” (“Hopscotch”), a kind of complicated choose-your-own-adventure where the reader plays by the author’s pre ...
All of these surreal situations are en countered in this collection of truly scary short stories by Argentina’s Julio Cortazar (Hopscotch), who lives and works in Paris. One of the stories ...
Sharon’s inspiration is Argentine novelist Julio Cortázar’s 1963 novel “Hopscotch,” which has expendable chapters at the end and may be read linearly or by jumping around. The characters ...
Earlier this year, New Directions published a series of lectures by the Argentine novelist and short-story writer Julio Cortázar ... describes his great novel “Hopscotch” as “a book ...
The new quartet album by alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón and pianist Laurent Coq is called Rayuela, which means "hopscotch." It's named for Julio Cortázar's novel, the fragmented tale of a ...
Adorno, after the German sociologist and philosopher.) Sponsor Message This week marks 100 years since the birth of Julio Cortázar, the Argentine novelist and short story writer. Although people ...