Bruce Chatwin's
In Patagonia (1977) is a book I read once a year, usually in the spring or fall. Like another favourite, Thomas Bernhard's
The Voice Imitator (1978/1997), the book is comprised of short prose pieces -- 97 in Chatwin's book, 103 in Bernhard's. For me, nothing (else) in Chatwin's oeuvre comes close, not even his best known book,
Songlines (1987).
Here is a line from
In Patagonia:
I pictured a low timber house with a shingle roof, caulked against storms, with blazing log fires inside and the walls lined with all the best books, somewhere to live when the rest of the world blew up.
to a bar you look I with even know watt Icon walk up to the bar the exact same way is a mine pantomime you see how we're going to get everything tied to watch from the back is when I grab the bar and I put in the position the bar would be well here yeah brother is a I will NO2 Maximusgo like this in squeeze the bar into my body she could see a locked in then your take of everything is the same let it settle
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