Misplaced Pages

The Aleph and Other Stories

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1949 book by Jorge Luis Borges

El Aleph
First edition
AuthorJorge Luis Borges
LanguageSpanish
PublisherEditorial Losada, Buenos Aires
Publication date1949
Publication placeArgentina
Pages224 (penguin classics edition)

The Aleph and Other Stories (Spanish: El Aleph, 1949) is a book of short stories by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. The title work, "The Aleph", describes a point in space that contains all other spaces at once. The work also presents the idea of infinite time. Borges writes in the original afterword, dated May 3, 1949 (Buenos Aires), that most of the stories belong to the genre of fantasy, mentioning themes such as identity and immortality. Borges added four new stories to the collection in the 1952 edition, for which he provided a brief postscript to the afterword. The story "La intrusa" (The Intruder) was first printed in the third edition of El Aleph (1966) and was later included in the collection El informe de Brodie (1970).

Contents

See also

Notes

  1. "The Queer Use of Communal Women in Borges' "El muerto" and "La intrusa"". Lanic.utexas.edu. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  2. ^ Added to the 1952 edition of "The Aleph"
Jorge Luis Borges
Bibliography
Original
short story
collections
A Universal History of Infamy
Ficciones
The Aleph
Dreamtigers
Dr. Brodie's Report
The Book of Sand
Shakespeare's Memory
Essays
Other works
Related


Stub icon

This article about a collection of short stories published in the 1940s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: