Small Memories
- Published: 1 September 2010
- ISBN: 9781409076582
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 224
The great thing about this memoir of boyhood is how unportentous it is for the most part
Michael Kerrigan, Scotsman
The lasting impression left by the self-portrait is of an abiding loneliness, nostalgia, and loss, leavened by humour and an unfeigned humility
Times Literary Supplement
A moving account of his childhood and adolescence...Small Memories will delight
Raymond Carr, The Spectator
The humiliations and joys of childhood, magnified by time, are delicately revisited
Angel Gurria-Quintana, Financial Times
A real insight into the making of a great writer
Independent
It's impossible not to be charmed by this fluid, spontaneous-seeming memoir of boyhood from the late Portuguese Nobel Laureate, Jose Saramago [...] For all its delightful novelty, however, the childhood described here is also beguilingly universal: the superstitions and terrors, the mysteries and joys
Daily Mail
A powerful and nostalgic memoir
The Times
The elliptical prose style that earned Saramago the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1998 imbues these snapshots with a sense of time irrecoverably lost as the author, who died earlier this year, reprises the significant episodes of his youth. Any lack of drama will be of little consequence to admirers of Saramago, whose mostly rural vignettes reflect the emotional pitch of an illustrious literary career
Financial Times
The voice of Small Memories is so immediate, genial and full of simple affection for the boy he was, that reading it feels very much like sharing a fireside with a talkative uncle
Guardian
The great thing about this memoir of boyhood is how unportentous it is for the most part
Michael Kerrigan, Scotsman
The lasting impression left by the self-portrait is of an abiding loneliness, nostalgia, and loss, leavened by humour and an unfeigned humility
Times Literary Supplement
A moving account of his childhood and adolescence...Small Memories will delight British readers
Raymond Carr, The Spectator
The humiliations and joys of childhood, magnified by time, are delicately revisited
Angel Gurria-Quintana, Financial Times
The voice of small memories is so immediate, genial and full of simple affection for the boy he was, that reading it feels very much like sharing a fireside with a talkative uncle. / The book's epigraph reads "Let yourself be led by the child you were" and this seems to encapsulate Saramago's attitude to writing: a childlike guilelessness and innocence channelled through a wise old mind.
Hermione Hoby, Observer
immediate, genial, and full of simple affection
Hermione Hoby, Guardian
It's impossible not to be charmed by this fluid, spontaneous-seeming memoir of boyhood from the late Portuguese Nobel Laureate, Jose Saramago [...] For all its delightful novelty, however, the childhood described here is also beguilingly universal: the superstitions and terrors, the mysteries and joys.
Daily Mail
A powerful and nostalgic memoir
The Times
The elliptical prose style that earned Saramago the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1998 imbues these snapshots with a sense of time irrecoverably lost as the author, who died earlier this year, reprises the significant episodes of his youth. Any lack of drama will be of little consequence to admirers of Saramago, whose mostly rural vignettes reflect the emotional pitch of an illustrious literary career.
Financial Times