A review by tasmanian_bibliophile
The City of Words by Alberto Manguel

4.0

Thanks to Ginnie Jones for mentioning this author. I am on my way to acquiring each of his titles.

I enjoyed this, perhaps not quite as much as some of the others, but it has made me think which is always a good thing.

I am reading this book for the second time: there was too much for me to consider and integrate on one reading. Alberto Manguel looks at the rise of violent intolerance in our societies. As part of this, he invites the reader to look at what is written (by visionaries, poets, novelists and essayists) and presented visually (by filmmakers) about the building of societies.
Under the following chapter headings, we are invited to think about the future by drawing on the past to interpret the present:
‘The Voice of Cassandra’
‘The Tablets of Gilgamesh’
‘The Bricks of Babel’
‘The Books of Don Quixote’
‘The Screen of Hal’
Alberto Manguel invites the reader to consider a number of different and important questions:
How does language itself determine, limit and enlarge our imagination of the world?
How do the stories we tell help us perceive ourselves and others?
Can such stories lend a whole society an identity, whether true or false?
Is it possible for stories to change us and the world we live in?
This is a book to keep and to refer back to. The prose is a joy to read for its own sake, the underlying messages are enduring and the questions are timeless.