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Del primer cuento publicado los 19 años al último hallado en estado fragmentario después de su muerte, Cuentos completos de Clarice Lispector invoca en un solo volumen los ochenta y cinco relatos que registran toda la vida de una de las más destacadas escritoras brasileñas. Desde la promesa adolescente hasta la implosión de una artista, pasando por la seguridad de la madurez, se descubre una figura célebre por revelar realidades ocultas de vidas visibles mediante una sintaxis resbaladiza y mutante.
Los personajes de Lispector luchan contra concepciones ideológicas sobre el lugar propio de la mujer en la sociedad, hacen frente a la desesperación que desemboca en la bebida, en la locura o en el suicidio; enfrentan problemas prácticos con sus maridos e hijos; muestran su aburrimiento y las felicidades clandestinas del ama de casa común; el placer de la joven ante su propia belleza; el cuerpo que engorda; el cuerpo que envejece.
La singularidad de Clarice puede atribuirse la fuerte influencia del misticismo judío, pero también a su necesidad de inventar una tradición y a su búsqueda de la divinidad mediante el reordenamiento de las letras y de una lógica distinta de la racional.
472 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2015




I was a very odd girl and, going pale, I saw it. Bristling, about to vomit, though to this day I don’t know for sure what I saw. But I know I saw it. I saw deep as into a mouth, in a flash I saw the abyss of the world. What I saw was as anonymous as a belly opened up for an intestinal operation. I saw some thing forming on his face – the already petrified distress was fighting its way up to his skin, I saw the grimace slowly hesitating and bursting through a crust – but this thing that in mute catastrophe was being uprooted, this thing so little resembled a smile as if a liver or a foot were trying to smile, I don’t know. Whatever I saw, I saw at such close range that I don’t know what I saw. As if my curious eye were glued to the keyhole and in shock came upon another eye looking back at me from the other side. I saw inside an eye. An eye opened up with its moving jelly. With its organic tears. An eye cries all by itself, an eye laughs all by itself. Until the man’s effort reached a peak of full awareness, and in a childish victory he showed, a pearl plucked from his open belly – that he was smiling. I saw a man with entrails smiling. I could see his extreme worry about getting it wrong, the diligence of the slow student, the clumsiness as if he’d suddenly become left-handed. Without understanding, I knew I was being asked to accept this offering from him and his open belly, and to accept the weight of this man. My back was desperately pushing against the wall, I shrank away – it was too soon for me to see all that. It was too soon for me to see how life is born. Life being born was so much bloodier than dying. Dying is uninterrupted. But seeing inert material slowly trying to loom up like one of the living-dead... Seeing hope terrified me, seeing life tied my stomach in knots. They were asking too much of my bravery simply because I was brave, they were asking for my strength simply because I was strong. “But what about me?” I shouted ten years later because of lost love, “who will ever see my weakness!” I looked at him in surprise, and never ever figured out what I saw, what I had seen could blind the curious.
I'm going to tell you all a secret: life is fatal.


