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The Complete Perfectionist

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Perfection is an ideal that makes life worth living--the internal applause as you hit the perfect note, write the perfect piece, reach the goal you once thought unattainable.  Yet many of us abandon that pursuit and settle for less than what we secretly perfect work, perfect love, perfect selves.  

Few have courted perfection like Nobel Prize winner Juan Ram¾n JimÚnez, who felt both fear and exhilaration before his own high standards and negotiated shrewdly with his own personal best.  

Drawing upon Juan Ram¾n's aphorisms, Christopher Maurer meditates upon his struggle and gives us a guide to the pursuit of life's ultimate the dream of doing perfect work.  Juan Ram¾n's relentless quest for the perfect poem leads here to an inspiring new vision of how to reach perfection in any endeavor.

Juan Ram¾n analyzes the most radical elements of how to create and revise, reconcile noise and silence, listen to dream and instinct, learn from nature, seize the moment, and calm the fear of death.  

The Complete Perfectionist provides advice and encouragement for anyone for whom mere excellence is not enough.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published February 17, 1997

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About the author

Juan Ramón Jiménez

481 books240 followers
Platero y Yo (1914) ranks as most famous work of Spanish poet Juan Ramón Jiménez, who introduced modernism to Spanish verse and won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1956.

He won this prize "for his lyrical poetry, which in Spanish language constitutes an example of high spirit and artistical purity."

See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Ram...

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Kirsten.
244 reviews29 followers
April 22, 2012
I loved this book--a collection of aphorisms from the over 4,000 the poet Juan Ramon Jimenez wrote down in his lifetime. They're organized under different headings like "Self," "Rhythm," and "Silence," and all have to do with the process of writing/living, which Jimenez was ever cogitating over. The title seems misleading to me--the "perfection" it gestures toward is not at all static and not so much related to an artistic product as to the process of creating-the continual reaching after an unobtainable ideal by throwing one's whole self into it.

Here was something unexpected--Jimenez's idea of memory as a hindrance to creating:

"My ideal would be 'to foreget and to make.' But I remember and remember and remember, and do not make."

"To forget is to be reborn."

"Ah, who could be as good at forgetting as remembering!"

(tee hee)
Profile Image for Sarah.
Author 11 books369 followers
March 16, 2013
Juan Ramón Jimenéz won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1956 for "his lyrical poetry, which in Spanish language constitutes an example of high spirit and artistical purity,” two years before he died. Jimenéz taught a generation of Spanish poets, and set out quite consciously with the goal of making Spanish poetry the most beautiful in the world. He spent six full decades writing.

His aphorisms exhibit a great striving and devotion to art, but can be dry, making Jimenéz sometimes seem like a poetic bureaucrat. And perhaps that’s what makes his poems so distilled and exquisite - the endless pursuit of perfection. It also makes him seem like a difficult character.

This book is broken into sections surrounding the topics Self, Rhythm, Silence, The Present, Memory, Ideals, Nature, Instinct, Dream, Death, Writing, Revision, Perfection. Each section includes an informative, short introduction by the book's editor with details on Jimenéz's life and work habits.

Jimenéz would not be one who believes “first draft, best draft.” He sought a balance between the free imagination (instinct) and the drive to revise (intelligence).

His best points are about silence and memory, silence being a wellspring in which to form your thoughts and develop your work undisturbed, and memory being rather ambiguous, that is, sometimes more a constraint than an inspiration. His best aphorism is - “To forget is to be reborn.”

Here are a few other favorites:

“When you’re working on one thing and start to yearn for another, imagine that this thing you’re working on would be the one you would yearn for if you were working on the other. (The Present)

“For remorse, there is no consolation.” (Memory)

“There are no better draftsmen than dust and shadows.” (Ideals)

And the one that seems to define his life:

“What does death matter if, in life and in work, we have conquered it day after day: if we have gone beyond it our thoughts and hearts?” (Death)
Profile Image for Mike.
1,432 reviews56 followers
September 6, 2024
4 stars for the aphorisms; 3 stars for this edition. A collection of aphorisms from Jiménez framed around commentary by the translator, Christopher Maurer. Unfortunately, there is far too much of the translator’s commentary and not enough of Jiménez’s aphorisms. While the introduction was welcome, and it’s always great to have some critical footnotes, at least 60% of this book is Maurer’s thesis on the poet. Jiménez has written so much, but very little is translated into English, so why not just present his work and allow the reader the pleasure of interpreting the text? I wish an editor had trimmed these long introductory passages and placed the more essential commentary as footnotes. As it stands now, this book is more about the translator than the poet.

The aphorisms – what few we are given – are highly personal self-reflections that function as poems in their own right. The aphorism is often an unjustly overlooked stylistic form, and Jiménez shows us that they can be works of poetry as much as nuggets of philosophy or merely clever sayings. While the theme of the book is the work of the poet, the most memorable sections here are about dreams, death, and memory – or perhaps forgetfulness. If the beauty of perfectionism is the impossibility of being perfect, then the hallmark of memory is the necessary desire to forget. So also with dreams: “What a shame to awaken now, just as I was finding in the life of dream what I had lost in the dream of life.” Maybe that could be an apt description of poetry, too.
Profile Image for sam.
34 reviews
August 26, 2024
A star intensely burning and intently becoming, enjoying itself and gaining nothing, a dream between ideas, a pure, a wonderfully useless defect in nature with long sensitive whiskers to sense the rough edges of the universe
11 reviews
April 27, 2025
Very inspiring if you flirt with writing your own poetry. A gorgeous little book of aphorisms that takes you into the mind of a master.
Profile Image for Rhys.
904 reviews138 followers
September 30, 2022
"No deep truth has ever been shouted."
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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