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Las memorias de lord Byron

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Quemadas inmediatamente después de su muerte, las memorias del más enigmático de los poetas románticos ingleses son reconstruidas aquí tras años de investigaciones. Genial, libertino, doliente y, sobre todo, profundamente humano.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1989

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About the author

Robert Nye

72 books48 followers
Robert Nye was an English writer, playwright and poet.

Nye started writing stories for children to entertain his three young sons. Nye published his first adult novel, Doubtfire, in 1967.

Nye's next publication after Doubtfire was a return to children's literature, a freewheeling version of Beowulf which has remained in print in many editions since 1968. In 1970, he published another children's book, Wishing Gold, and received the James Kennaway Memorial Award for his collection of short stories, Tales I Told My Mother (1969).

During the early 1970s Nye wrote several plays for BBC radio including “A Bloody Stupit Hole” (1970), “Reynolds, Reynolds” (1971), and a version of Penthesilea by Heinrich von Kleist (1971). He was also commissioned by Covent Garden to write an unpublished libretto for Harrison Birtwistle's opera, Kronia (1970). Nye held the position of writer in residence at the University of Edinburgh, 1976-1977, during which time he received the Guardian fiction prize, followed by the 1976 Hawthornden Prize for his novel Falstaff.

He continued to write poetry, publishing Darker Ends (1969) and Divisions on a Ground (1976), and to prepare editions of other poets with whose work he felt an affinity: Sir Walter Ralegh, William Barnes, and Laura Riding. His own Collected Poems appeared in 1995. His selected poems, entitled The Rain and The Glass, published in 2005, won the Cholmondeley Award. From 1977 he lived in County Cork, Ireland. Although his novels have won prizes and been translated into many languages, it is as a poet that he would probably have preferred to be remembered. The critic Gabriel Josipovici described him as "one of the most interesting poets writing today, with a voice unlike that of any of his contemporaries."

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Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
March 9, 2009
this book reads like some kids report on byron. "and then i did this and then i did this, and then i fucked my sister." well, maybe not like a kids report, but it is so totally bloodless; its like an outline of his life with no meat. i am wicked disappointed because i was going to begin my byronathon and finally read all the fun books about byron i got from playing the library game, and i thought i would start with this one because it looked the least like a romance novel. now i think i should have gone the other way and impressed everyone in grad school with my broad and undiscriminating reading habits.
Profile Image for Ben Lovegrove.
Author 10 books12 followers
October 13, 2013
Got this from the library as a teenager years ago when I wanted to read the real memoirs of Byron which I didn't know had been burned. It's funny because it's written in the style he would actually write. He gets fed up with Shelley banging on about the doctrine of eternal beauty. Goes into detail about his molestation by his governess and all the stuff that really happened in his life. So you can actually learn a lot about Byron's life from this novel which is extremely well written satire, yet worthy novelisation of his life.
Profile Image for Kay Hawkins.
Author 19 books31 followers
December 3, 2018
Terrible. I'm a big Lord Byron fan and I know that he didn't write this but it doesn't make it much better. It's written like a teenage boy trying to write erotica, very jumpy and when talking about sex. It seems to just list events more than describe. It hops around in events in the time of his life. To anyone wanting to read this, take a lot of it with a grain of salt. Lots of true and correct facts are in here but the little details I would double check all. It feels like reading one of the scholastic books you read as a kid in school but isn't because of all the sex. I have nothing wrong with the sex when you learn about Byron the sex was a big part of his life. Also if this "was" saupossed to be his memoirs why would it leave out Hobhouse? Hobbs is in it but not as his lover just as a best friend. One belief I have of why Hobbs wanted the original manuscript burned was it relieved things about him and Byron would would get him in trouble. The original burned manuscript was more of a final confession holding nothing back, this book is a boy's idea of what he thinks was sexy is. Example of how he got things wrong. When he is talking about Byron being sexually abused by his nanny when he was 9(true fact). He makes it sound like Byron loved it and enjoyed it and not in the least bit scared. In truth, Byron was confused by this. Yes it in ways felt good but in the day she was beating the bible into him and it confused him his whole life about religion and God. This book makes it seemed like he was already a horny little child and enjoyed it. Just because he loved sex doesn't mean that every sexual encounter in his life was good. And I bet if this was truly his memoirs and a tell all he would would state and good and the bad. He was miserable for more of his life and I think that is missing a lot of this book. A tell all tale would have shown the good and the bad. While Bob Nye takes a lot of liberties in his story telling, why when he is going on about Byron and his mother state this fact. One of the reasons Byron hated his mother so much was because he believed the reason for his clubfoot was was because she wore her corset too tight when pregnant. It wasn't all to do with thinking he was a demon. The book spends pages talking about his foot and how he thought he was the devil for being born with a 'cloven hoof' but doesn't point blame at his mother. I don't recommend this book it's not a great story and it is loosely based on his life. I feel he was trying to write something he didn't want to.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for 🐴 🍖.
503 reviews41 followers
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August 29, 2019
soda water, misogyny, rivalries, misogyny, more soda water, biscuits, misogyny, incest, custody battle, gondolas, soda water, a little bit more misogyny. spasmodically witty but v little else goin' on points-of-interest-wise
Profile Image for Eva Mandy.
330 reviews30 followers
May 30, 2020
Es difícil equilibrar el fervor de dos corazones cuando sólo uno de ellos arde con un fuego inagotable.

Más allá de que disfrutes o no de su obra, nadie puede negar que Lord Byron era todo un personaje. A pesar de haber leído alguna antología de sus poemas, no me había picado realmente la curiosidad por leer más sobre su vida hasta que escuché un capítulo del podcast de Greg Jenner para la BBC "You're dead to me" dedicado a él.

Partiendo de la creencia de que Byron escribió (o comenzó a escribir) sus memorias, pero que luego se destruyeron antes de que vieran la luz, Robert Nye toma datos reales y compone lo que podía haber sido esta particular autobiografía.

Aunque los primeros capítulos me han parecido bastante caóticos y desordenados, mezclando en demasía presente y pasado, he disfrutado sobradamente de la última parte del libro, en especial a partir de su divorcio de Lady Byron y su forzada partida a Italia. Los Post Scriptum, dedicados a la muerte de su hija Allegra y de su amigo Percy Bysshe Shelley (uno de mis poetas favoritos), son magníficos.

Me ha encantado que en la introducción, de Luis Antonio de Villena, se haga referencia a algunas obras más que tratan también sobre este peculiar poeta, así que no las descarto como próximas lecturas.

Lo único que me ha molestado quizá de verdad es que a lo largo del libro aparecen fragmentos de poemas de Byron que se muestran directamente traducidos al castellano. Me hubiera gustado que hubiera sido precisamente como en la introducción, incluyendo tanto el texto original como la traducción.

Bien puede ser cierto que el gran objetivo de la vida sea sentir, sentir que se existe, aunque sea mediante el dolor.
Profile Image for Allegra Byron.
92 reviews16 followers
October 11, 2016
Sentimientos encontrados con esta novela, por una parte se supone que son las memorias de Byron, quemadas y destruidas por su entorno para preservar su memoria y la de los y las que se cruzaron en su camino. Pero no, Byron no escribía así... Aunque en algunos momentos se acerca a ese genio inimitable, no te da la sensación de estar leyendo esas memorias de valor incalculable.
Profile Image for Donnie Corrêa.
62 reviews8 followers
May 6, 2011
This isn't really a great book, it's just a preference. I like Lord Byron's travels a lot, and I have a knack for crazy and self-destructive personalities, so this one is a weakspot for me. If you also have the anti-hero/villain syndrome, you should read it.
Profile Image for Harvey.
7 reviews
June 9, 2010
Highly recommend, this is the first book of Nye's that I've ever read. Captures Byron perfectly.
Profile Image for Brad.
8 reviews1 follower
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August 7, 2023
Las memorias de Lord Byron" de Robert Nye [195 págs]

Las verdaderas memorias de Lord Byron fueron quemadas dos meses después de su muerte, por su biógrafo, su albacea, su editor, su mujer y su hermanastra, puesto que "Las memorias enteras solo eran adecuadas para un burdel y hubieran condenado a lord Byron a la perpetua infamia, de haberse publicado", escribió después Hobhouse en su diario.

Robert Nye se lanzó a la investigación y escribió de forma osada y certera esta novela, y usó la voz de Lord Byron. Es breve, concisa, clara, y no se excede con lirismos ni justificaciones de actos.

Byron se convirtió en mito viviente, al punto de ser reconocido en Roma por una familia inglesa que turisteaba, en plena calle, y tener que escuchar a la madre decirle a la hija: "¡Ese es lord Byron! ¡Aparta los ojos de él, querida! ¡Solo mirarlo ya es peligroso!"

Nuestro hermoso poeta fue bisexual, un tanto misógino, incestuoso, promiscuo, ególatra y deliciosamente cínico, irreverente y desafiante. Todo un personaje orgánico, más famoso por su propia existencia que por su obra.

El gran romántico, no en el sentido amoroso con el que más conocemos el calificativo —Byron fue más bien libidonoso—, sino por su espiritualidad, su nacionalismo, su genialidad, a ratos celebrada y a la par incomprendida, su exaltación del sentimentalismo y a la vez, su egoísta forma de vivir.

Su libertad de pensamiento nunca fue comprendida en Inglaterra, y vivió mucho tiempo en Italia y Grecia. Quiso irse a Venezuela, país que le daba curiosidad, y hasta tuvo un barquito al que llamó Bolívar.

Amé esta reivindicación del mítico poeta. Nye le hace justicia a su genio, tan sensual, tan sexual, tan humano. Celebra la amistad profunda con Percy Shelley, y esclarece algunas verdades detrás de los rumores exagerados que lo persiguieron. Por desgracia, mucha de la mojigatería que condenaba Byron aún existe, ¡Y peor! En gente que lee.

Me encantó, me encantó, me encantó.
Profile Image for Benja.
446 reviews5 followers
September 3, 2024
SINOPSIS:

Supuestas memorias apócrifas de Lord Byron, escritas cómo no, en primera persona y en donde nos narra toda su vida.

COMENTARIO:

Lord Byron es considerado el paradigma de hombre romántico, aventurero y poeta. Sin embargo la imagen que yo he sacado de Lord Byron es que era un mujeriego y libertino, un completo egoísta que tan solo se preocupaba por sí mismo sin importarle los demás. Nunca respetó a ninguna mujer, tan solo las utilizó para sus deseos sexuales (un tanto desviados y perversos para aquella época, amén de practicar la homosexualidad, aunque solo sea de pasada). Se gastó su fortuna, heredada de su padre, en juergas y desmadres. Lo único que hizo positivo en esta vida, es que de vez en cuando le daba por la poesía y escribía sus rimas, de las cuales pudo sacar algo de sustento.

En las memorias también aparece un amigo suyo del alma, el poeta Sheley, marido de Mary Sheley, autora de "Frankestein" al que Lord Byron hace referencia, en el sentido que en una reunión que tuvieron varios amigos en Suiza, se comprometieron (¿Una apuesta quizás?) a escribir una obra, saliendo ganadora Mary Sheley con su "Frankestein".

En fin, que no he salido con muy buena imagen de Lord Byron. Hay que tener en cuenta que no es más que unas supuesta memorias apócrifas que muy poco tendrán que ver con la verdadera personalidad de Lord Byron. También he de decir que al estar escrito sin diálogos, pensé que iba a ser un tango farragoso de leer, pero por el contrario se lee muy bien, me ha sorprendido en este sentido.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Carlotes.
20 reviews
August 14, 2023
Empeze a leer este libro (como buen paletillo que soy) sin saber quien era Byron, ni sabía si era un personaje ficticio o real. Al parecer estas memorias se creian perdidas, ya que Byron las quemo todas, solo quedó una copia. La verdad entiendo porque no querria que salieran a la luz, pero a la vez que hay muchos episodios traumaticos a lo largo de su vida todavia hay un tono divertido y humano, muy ingles.
Normalmente cuando leo un libro intento (bueno me sale más sin querer que aposta) identificarme con el personaje, ya que suelen ser heroes o personas interesantes, inteligentes o especiales por ponerlo de alguna forma, pero en este caso he sentido una distancia muy fuerte, y a la vez una cercania distinta a lo que acostumbro.
Distancia porque (obviando los 250 años que nos separan) su realidad, su personalidad y sus ideas distan mucho de mi forma de estar en el mundo. Y cercania porque puedes ver una persona con sus pasiones, sus sueños, sus sentimientos y bastante gracioso.
Me encanta leer cosas tan "viejas" y de ingleses. Libro ligero, facil de leer y entretenido. 8.5/10
9 reviews
September 1, 2019
I was intrigued by how well the writer managed to bring the historical figure of Byron to life. Whether he is close to the truth or not didn´t feel to me like the most important thing here; the story stands on its own feet and when you look Nye´s Byron in the eye, you can see right into his soul. Was this his true soul? Does the answer to that question really matter? You can find an answer in the book itself, where the main character muses over the relationship between Teresa Macri and "The Maid of Athens":
"Reality is only paper thin itself, and perhaps the Muse may sometimes be more real than the mortal creatures in whom she takes up her residence from time to time in order to delight and appall us."

I also enjoyed how the novel was structured -there definitely went more thought into that than a certain previous reviewer cared to discover.

A smart, poetic, entertaining read.
Profile Image for Karen.
2,648 reviews
July 22, 2020
Interesting, entertaining and amusing.
430 reviews6 followers
x-nah
April 24, 2022
Had and gave away. Purging the TBR pile.
Profile Image for Tania Otero.
72 reviews
February 13, 2026
Lo recordaba más extrafalario y divertido. Está vez me ha resultado rancio y aburrido.
Profile Image for Ron.
523 reviews11 followers
June 17, 2016
Byron's actual memoirs were destroyed after his death by friends believing them to be too incendiary. Nye here takes that assumption to heart, sort of. Byron is in his early thirties, self-exiled to Venice, where he is, of course, tupping first the maid and then a countess with an older husband, and scribbling down his memoirs. He tells us just about what everyone already knew: his family, though titled, was impecunious, his father rather a nut-case, as was his mother, of a different sort. He was buggered in boarding school, but was not scarred by the experience, and takes up the practice with his flighty wife--as the bugger, not the buggee. He admits that he never really cared for women, was easily charmed and pussy-whipped by them, but he soon tired of them, and would much rather have spent his time drinking and playing sports with his cronies. All except Augusta, his half-sister, for whom he admits a life-long love (after they re-met in adulthood, after having never known each other as children).
An amusing little bagatelle, rather a slight effort, with none of the loopy imaginings of Falstaff or Voyage of the Destiny.
While being cornholed by the lustful upper form boy, young George manages to expel a turd, which pushes the marauder out of his bumhole. Byron saucily says, "I am dreadfully sorry I may have ruined your pleasure." The women he famously had affairs with were all loons. He quickly tired of being famous for Childe Harold.
Profile Image for Rania Ioannou.
Author 3 books18 followers
May 19, 2014
Perhaps this was Lord B., perhaps not.. we will never find out. Does it matter? He is a legend nonetheless. Anyway, I found this book very interesting to read, quite sensitive to his memory and constructed around many well-documented anecdotes from the poet's life. But one needs to be careful and read it only as fiction. The facts are facts but how they might have been really perceived by Lord B. no one can really tell.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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