A monumental biography of one of the twentieth century's greatest and most enigmatic writers
For many thousands of readers Fernando Pessoa's The Book of Disquiet is almost a way of life. Ironic, haunting and melancholy, this completely unclassifiable work is the masterpiece of one of the twentieth century's most enigmatic writers.
Richard Zenith's Pessoa at last allows us to understand this extraordinary figure. Some eighty-five years after his premature death in Lisbon, where he left over 25,000 manuscript sheets in a wooden trunk, Fernando Pessoa (1888-1935) can now be celebrated as one of the great modern poets. Setting the story of his life against the nationalistic currents of European history, Zenith charts the heights of Pessoa's explosive imagination and literary genius.
Much of Pessoa's charm and strangeness came from his writing under a variety of names that he used to write in wildly varied styles with different imagined personalities. Zenith traces the back stories of virtually all of these invented others, called 'heteronyms', demonstrating how they were projections, spin-offs or metamorphoses of Pessoa himself. Zenith's monumental work confirms the power of Pessoa's words to speak prophetically to the disconnectedness of modern life.
A monumental biography of one of the twentieth century's greatest and most enigmatic writers
For many thousands of readers Fernando Pessoa's The Book of Disquiet is almost a way of life. Ironic, haunting and melancholy, this completely unclassifiable work is the masterpiece of one of the twentieth century's most enigmatic writers.
Richard Zenith's Pessoa at last allows us to understand this extraordinary figure. Some eighty-five years after his premature death in Lisbon, where he left over 25,000 manuscript sheets in a wooden trunk, Fernando Pessoa (1888-1935) can now be celebrated as one of the great modern poets. Setting the story of his life against the nationalistic currents of European history, Zenith charts the heights of Pessoa's explosive imagination and literary genius.
Much of Pessoa's charm and strangeness came from his writing under a variety of names that he used to write in wildly varied styles with different imagined personalities. Zenith traces the back stories of virtually all of these invented others, called 'heteronyms', demonstrating how they were projections, spin-offs or metamorphoses of Pessoa himself. Zenith's monumental work confirms the power of Pessoa's words to speak prophetically to the disconnectedness of modern life.
Richard Zenith is an acclaimed translator and literary critic. His translations include Pessoa's The Book of Disquiet and Fernando Pessoa and Co.- Selected Poems, which won the PEN Award for Poetry in Translation. The recipient of Portugal's Pessoa Prize, Zenith lives in Lisbon.
A masterpiece of literary biography ... a tour de force of cultural
history. Zenith's achievement is extraordinary. By illuminating
this elusive figure Zenith has produced a work in some ways as
astonishing as those of Pessoa himself.
*New Statesman*
Mammoth, definitive and sublime. Zenith has written the only kind
of biography truly permissible, an account of a life that plucks at
the very borders and burdens of the notion of a self.
*New York Times*
A completely superb and magisterial life of Fernando Pessoa.
Finally, this extraordinary poet gets the great biography he
deserves. Unsurpassable.
*William Boyd*
Even now, Fernando Pessoa remains one of the lesser-known of the
truly great writers of the 20th century. This immense, magnificent
biography is going to change that... here is a revelation: a modern
master to rank alongside Joyce, Kafka, Beckett, say. Such a
revolutionary literary discovery seems unlikely to be on offer
again. It's that good.
*Sunday Times*
Monumental ... To do justice to the magnitude and complexities of
Pessoa Zenith, a translator and literary critic, spent more than a
decade collating material. The result is a tour de force.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Erudite, sensitive and entertaining, this multi-faceted portrait
pays its giant homage to a man who wasn't there.
*Financial Times*
Monumental ... Zenith brought to the task a depth of scholarship
gained through more than 30 years of publishing, translating and
promoting his subject's work; Pessoa, who had few intimates in
life, is lucky to have found this posthumous friend ... Pessoa
really did build an entire city. It was a city that needed a guide.
Thanks to Zenith, it has one at last.
*New York Times*
A portrait with bags of personality ... Richard Zenith's massive
biography of the Portuguese writer who constructed numerous
identities captures his tragicomic oddity.
*Observer*
A truly comprehensive representation of any one person is almost
impossible. That very impossibility is largely what makes Richard
Zenith's biography of the Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa so
remarkable.
*Literary Review*
Ingenious ... with flashes of charm and wit.
*The Spectator*
A gloriously labyrinthine biography ... Zenith's dynamic prose,
deep erudition, and incisive readings of Pessoa's poetry make for a
meticulous portrait of one artist's brilliant and bewildering inner
world.
*Publishers Weekly*
Finally! A brilliant biography that places Pessoa where he should
have always belonged, with Joyce, Proust, and Musil - true giants,
none of whom were Nobel laureates.
*André Aciman, author of CALL ME BY YOUR NAME*
Pessoa is a triumph of scholarship and verve that one cannot easily
put down.
*Antonio Damasio, author of DESCARTES' ERROR*
Richard Zenith is his genius biographer who has given [Pessoa]
fresh life. No one on earth knows more about Pessoa. With its
historical sweep and novelistic execution, this biography will
never be bested.
*William Giraldi, author of AMERICAN AUDACITY*
When you consider the fantastically vivid details of Fernando
Pessoa's curious life contained in this biography, and the
energetic and elegant quality of the writing, you might wonder if
this book is actually a just discovered autobiography, written by
one of Pessoa's heteronyms, 'Richard Zenith.' No one, it seems,
could know so much or relate it so marvelously unless they had
lived inside Pessoa's head. Zenith's Pessoa is magnificent.
*Forrest Gander, author of BE WITH*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |