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World Famous Comics: From A to X: A Story in Letters
From A to X: A Story in Letters
By: John Berger
Publisher: Verso
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Hardcover
Label: Verso
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 224
Publication Date: September 01, 2008

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From A to X: A Story in Letters
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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
A beautifully imagined story of love and resistance, by one of the foremost novelists of our age.

In the dusty, ramshackle town of Suse lives A'ida. Her insurgent husband Xavier has been imprisoned. Resolute, sensuous and tender, A'ida's letters to the man she loves tell of daily events in the town, and of its motley collection of inhabitants whose lives flow through hers. But Suse is under threat, and as a faceless power inexorably encroaches from outside, so the smallest details and acts of humanity—an intimate dance, a shared meal—assume for A'ida a life-affirming significance, acts of resistance against the forces that might otherwise extinguish them. From A to X is a powerful exploration of how humanity affirms itself in struggle: imagining a community which, besieged by economic and military imperialism, finds transcendent hope in the pain and fragility, vulnerability and sorrow of daily existence.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

5 out of 5 starsAs always...
Berger is a marvel. He is a fearless artist armed with penetrating vision and magificent command of his craft. I have been reading his work since the mid-sixties and wonder always how it is that he never, ever gets stale.

There are many things to love about From A to X, such as its economy. Telling the story through letters and notes delivered a feel of intimacy I found quite gripping, especially so because it was delivered in the voice of the woman. It is a novel of political passion delivered in a quiet voice. I hope you read it.



4 out of 5 starsEvocative and moving, but a bit slight compared to Berger's earlier work
This is a "novel" in the form of a discontinuous, out-of-order series of letters from A'ida, an activist, to her imprisoned lover Xavier. The letters are arranged, as the book's conceit is explained in a brief introduction by Berger (who has "found" or "been given" them), as they have been found in Xavier's cell after he departed, in a few bundles. They are interspersed with little fragments of writing by Xavier -- the only words of his we read, as his replies to A'ida are not printed -- which are mostly political reflections, sometimes quoted from figures like Eduardo Galeano and Subcomandante Marcos, and which in the main sound suspiciously like interjections from Berger himself, though this is not at all obtrusive or disruptive to the reader's experience. The letters from A'ida retell little incidents of life and political resistance, from a neighbor's jelly-making to her work at a pharmacy to a night of protest, ringed by occupiers' tanks. While the setting is deliberately fictionalized and the place names are drawn from ancient Assyria, there are still some details that make it seem likely the characters are Palestinians; but their experience is meant to be an allegory of activist life anywhere rather than a depiction of a specific place or a single historical moment. (Xavier's situation clearly evokes that of Nazim Hikmet or Antonio Gramsci, for instance.)

Though there are a few incidents, for the most part there is little plot, little development in the situation of either character over the course of the book, and the letters are out of chronological order in any case; what is important is the tone created in A'ida's lamenting her lover's absence and summoning his memory, the particular, carefully structured feeling of long but hopefully not interminable absence evoked by the book. As a result of this, the book can feel a bit monotonous -- literally, in that it has only one tone and little variation (we might wish for a joke to break the pathos, or a real narrative line); but this is not a fault so much as a choice, and the choice to stay in one emotional register undeniably has a great cumulative power over the course of this relatively short book, written in common language and about common experience.

"To tell the truth? Words tortured until they give themselves up to their polar opposites [...] Solution: the evening language of the poor. With this some truths can be told and held."

This is one of Xavier's interjections, but it is also an apt statement of the goal of Berger's writing. His late fiction has often been concerned with recuperating the love stories of common people, poor people, and gently transposing these love stories into a political register; To the Wedding was a particular and concrete version of this, Lilac and Flag (the last volume of his great trilogy Into Their Labours) was a more general and allegorized one. This book seems a sequel of sorts to Lilac and Flag, an attempt to build something more hopeful on those characters' desperation and to help build a mood which is not tragic out of their sad existence. Though this is not Berger's greatest work, in this regard it is a great and worthy success.



5 out of 5 starsGreat writing
Ah, such beauty, such clarity, and much power. Which is why I have 1st editions of all Berger's books. Read From A to X with wonder!


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