![]() ![]() ![]() César vacillates endlessly, only to discover that Ovando may in fact be hoping to use César’s talents for his own secret aims. César considers joining Ovando on a quest for further magical powers, but balks at the requirement that he give up literature, the “protean power of transformation” that has been his life’s work. Ovando claims he can “make the laws of physics do his bidding,” and proves it, transforming a sugar cube into gold before César’s eyes. After he encounters Ovando, a 40-ish bookseller and “scruffy hustler” with “intellectual pretensions,” César discovers a new interest in magic. César, a 60-something Buenos Aires author, is unwilling to write about the events of his own life, which is full of “painful scars” he wants to forget. A writer’s future hangs in the balance when he is tempted by an “unexpected Mephistopheles” in Aira’s playful, self-reflexive latest (after Artforum), an entry in New Directions’ Storybook series. ![]()
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