This is a clearly written companion piece to the difficult fiction of Jorge Luis Borges. There is wonderful chapter at the end that shows how his life, particularly his difficulties with women, impacted his fiction and poetry. I also appreciated the analysis of philosophical and religious themes in the work of Borges. For instance, there is intelligent discussion of the relationship of notions of idealism (that all reality is mental), nominalism (that there are no universals, only particular things), and realism (that universals, or general concepts, actually exist). The influence of Judaism and Christianity and Gnosticism is also given attention in this book. Borges, for instance, explores curious beliefs such as the idea that God became Judas to redeem mankind.