Blow-up and Other Stories explained

Blow-Up and Other Stories
Author:Julio Cortázar
Translator:Paul Blackburn
Cover Artist:Jaime Davidovich

Blow-Up and Other Stories is a collection of short stories by Argentine author Julio Cortázar, selected from three of his earlier Spanish-language collections: Bestiario (1951), Final del juego (1956), and Las armas secretas (1959). The work was originally published in English translation by Paul Blackburn as End of the Game and Other Stories (1967), before being changed in a subsequent edition to its present title.[1] The story "Blow-Up" served as the inspiration for the film of the same name by Michelangelo Antonioni.[2]

Contents

References

  1. Book: Cortázar, Julio . Blow-Up: And Other Stories . 2014-08-05 . Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group . 978-0-8041-5324-9 . en.
  2. 20119031. "Blow-up": Cortázar's and Antonioni's. Latin American Literary Review. 4. 9. 7–13. Kester. Gary. 1976.
  3. Book: Bloom's Major Short Story Writers: Julio Cortázar . Chelsea House Publishers . 2004 . 0791075923 . Bloom . Harold . Philadelphia .
  4. Web site: Los Anales de Buenos Aires nº 11 – Ahira . 2024-10-10 . es-AR.
  5. News: Wood . Michael . September 9, 1973 . Reality is waiting in ambush, beyond the fiction . . 390.
  6. Wheelock . Carter . 1985 . Borges, Cortâzar, and the Aesthetic of the Vacant Mind . The International Fiction Review . 12 . 1 . 9.
  7. Web site: by . 2023-01-05 . A Summary and Analysis of Julio Cortazar’s ‘The Distances’ . 2024-10-10 . Interesting Literature . en-US.
  8. Web site: Los Anales de Buenos Aires nº 18-19 – Ahira . 2024-10-14 . es-AR.

External links