Jorge Luis Borges, one of the indisputably great writers of the
twentieth century, was born in Buenos Aires in 1899. Never having been
awarded the Nobel Prize, which his readers worldwide believed he
deserved, this story writer, poet, essayist, and man of letters died at
age eighty-six. This anthology of interviews with him features more than
a dozen conversations that cover all phases of his life and work. He
discusses his blindness, his family and childhood, early travels,
literary friends, and struggles to find his literary identity. In depth
he examines the meanings and intentions of his own famous stories and
poems, and he speaks of the writers whose works he has loved - Dante,
Cervantes, Emerson, Dickinson, H. G. Wells, Kafka, Stevenson, Kipling,
Whitman, Frost, and Faulkner - and of those whom he disliked, such as
Hemingway and Lorca. Borges expresses his contempt for Peron and
assesses the tumultuous politics of Argentina. He speaks also of the
imagination as a type of dreaming, about issues of collaboration and
translation, about philosophy, and about time.