posted afternoon of Friday, June 18th, 2010
➳ More posts about José Saramago
➳ More posts about Readings
Thinking further about this... I just wanted to emphasize how happy I am that I found out about Saramago's books while he was still alive, still writing -- I felt like I connected with him in a way that I would not have been able to do if I started reading his works after he had died. Not really sure how coherent this is. (Since after all there are many writers whom I did not start reading until they were ex-writers, whose work I love dearly -- the majority I should think.)
posted evening of June 18th, 2010 by Jeremy
Jeremy, I can relate to your addendum on reading him while he was still at it. I've read my first book by him (The Gospel) some ten years ago and read three more since. I think, for me, it's the joy of discovering a living contemporary writer who at any given moment will put out another beautiful piece of writing that will be published and translated and that you know will also soon find its way in your shelf. Maybe there's an immediacy and freshness to the appreciation of the living words of a living writer, that we are somehow privileged in a way different from that of posthumous discovery of living words of ex-writers.
posted morning of June 19th, 2010 by Rise
an immediacy and freshness to the appreciation of the living words
Very nicely put! This is just what I was trying to get at. And perhaps even moreso in the case of Saramago because some of his "living words" -- his blog entries, his speeches, his columns -- were directed at current events. Truly an inspirational figure.
posted morning of June 19th, 2010 by Jeremy
At his age his departure surely didn't come as a big surprise, not for him, nor for us. What's surprising is how lucid he remained until the end.
Do you know if the Bach violin piece performed at his funeral service was the one from Death with Interruptions?
I haven't found much information about it in english, but here's an article from a chilean news portal:
http://www.emol.com/noticias/magazine/detalle/detallenoticias.asp?idnoticia=420014
posted afternoon of June 20th, 2010 by Jorge López
Hi Jorge, that does seem very likely -- none of the news stories I have found about the funeral mention what song was played other than that it was a cello piece by Bach. (The piece from Death With Interruptions is Suite #6 in D.)
posted evening of June 20th, 2010 by Jeremy