Aunt Julia And The
Scriptwriter was published in 1977. The edition I read was the Avon Books
version, originally published in the 1980s. I believe my copy is from 1990, as there is a sticker on the cover which reads, “Now the major motion picture ‘Tune In Tomorrow.’”
This blog started out as Michael Doherty's Personal Library, containing reviews of books that normally don't get reviewed: basically adult and cult books. It was all just a bit of fun, you understand. But when I embarked on a three-year Shakespeare study, Shakespeare basically took over, which is a good thing.
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Shakespeare References in Aunt Julia And The Scriptwriter
Mario Vargas Llosa’s novel Aunt Julia And The Scriptwriter contains a few Shakespeare
references. The first, actually, is only a possible reference to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Mario Vargas
Llosa writes, “He stopped in the garden for a few seconds to get Puck, the
badly spoiled fox terrier, who bade him goodbye with affectionate yaps” (p.
19). Puck isn’t exclusive to Shakespeare’s play, but I’m including the
reference anyway, as there are two other Shakespeare references in the book.
The second is to Shakespeare himself: “and the title was nothing if not vast in
scope: Ten Thousand Literary Quotations
Drawn from the Hundred Best Writers in the World, with the subtitle: ‘What
Cervantes, Shakespeare, Moliere, etc., have had to say about God, Life, Death,
Love, Suffering, etc. …’” (p. 51). The other reference is to Romeo And Juliet: “He fell to the ground
alongside Sarita, and the two of them, with their last breath, managed to
embrace and thus enter, clasped in each other’s arms, the dark night of hapless
lovers (such as a certain Romeo and Juliet?)…” (p. 297).
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