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Festival & Game of the Worlds

By César Aira & Katherine Silver
Festival & Game of the Worlds by César Aira & Katherine Silver digital book - Fable

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Publisher Description

Oddly twinned masterpieces by one of the greatest fabulists of any age: past, present, or 40,000 years in the future

In Festival, the genius postmodern sci-fi filmmaker Alec Steryx is the star guest of a film festival in an unnamed country. But he’s brought a surprise: his nonagenarian mother. Everyone is baffled: Why? Half-blind and terminally cranky, she does nothing but complain, despite insisting on attending every screening and reception. As Steryx’s mother gums up the works for the festival organizers, larger problems are in store … A delightfully baroque comedy of errors, Festival, is, all at once, a loving parody of the institutions that support artists, a meditation on postmodern art, and a propulsive, lyrical, surreal adventure. 

In the far, far, future, a middle-aged father has fallen behind the times. Bemused and disturbed, he watches his children play the eponymous Game of the Worlds, a Total Reality war game that involves the annihilation of countless alien civilizations—which are at least as real as the narrator’s own. As he debates the ethics of the game, struggles with his home’s “intelligent system,” and fumblingly manipulates his Discourse Corrector (a dead ringer for ChatGPT) on virtual beachside dates, an errant thought threatens to set a world-ending chain of logic into motion: the return of the Idea of God… Epic and domestic, madcap and musing by turns, this prescient novel reads like a message in a bottle from a bewitchingly strange yet all-too familiar future.

1 Review

4.0
“"It was an artistic idea - and there was nothing strange about the fact that he'd taken it seriously, for he took art seriously. And artistic ideas, as he'd confirmed through experience, have a precarious life they are very fragile. Put into practice, they can be revealed as not as good as they seem when they are only ideas. Or rather, even if they turn out to be good and fertile, they wear thin and then vanish into the work they've given birth to, and soon they are replaced in the field of ideas by new ones, which always seem better. " If you're going to do something, just do it. Even if you're a renowned filmmaker asked to attend a film festival a prestigious guest and jury member. Bring along your nonagenarian mother who slows things down and complains at every single opportunity. Don't accept the help that is offered to you to take care of her by those who want to get close to you and live through whatever challenges it brings about. And later, only later sit back and evaluate what good it served and if the idea was anywhere near as good as the reality. Then you can move on to the next thing whatever that is and create it based on a whim, impulse, or an idea, and build on that faith and trust in the creative process. "Once the initial shock had passed and I could view our misunderstanding with more equanimity, I asked myself if we really disagreed at all. Perhaps the idea of God, which had done so much damage to ancient civilizations, was one of those ideas with double meanings, like rent, which can mean both that the owner rents a property to a tenant and that the tenant rents it from the owner." In the distant future, it may be perfectly standard to have discussions with your adolescent children about their daily exploits destroying worlds that exist in far-off locations in the universe. The singularity will have come and totally rid our society of God, love and even the pleasure of reading. If this sounds horrific, I would wholeheartedly agree with you. Yet, Aira applies astute levity to the subject matter of war, AI and God. Mixed along with some laughs, the picture painted in Game of the Worlds is definitely a doom-filled disaster of potential outcomes of our present decisions. Whether sifting through the world of post-modern art and films, the relationships between mother and son, or father and children, the heaviness of technology in a Matrix-like future, the glamorization and idolization of artists, this first introduction to César Aira's work was a welcomed literary adventure. No matter the subject of his other novellas, I am very interested in reading more of his work and ideas of the world. These novellas will not be the last I read of Aira. That, I can promise you. In Game of the Worlds, Aira refuses to shy away from the heavy topics of our times such as the over-saturation of technology, parents' relationships with their adolescent children, modern war, God, space travel and alien civilizations. Aira doesn't directly insinuate that we live in a simulation, though some ideas were very Matrix-like. The narrator is a middle-aged father in the distant future, grappling with understanding the times, his children and essence and need for God in the world. This story took a while to pick for me, and eventually got going and in the end, I was very pleased to have read this second novella on a rainy afternoon at the cottage. As an introduction to César Aira, I was very pleased with the two novellas Festival & Game of the Worlds. Festival tells the story of Alec Steryx attending a film festival as a prestigious guest and Steryx has decided to bring along his nonagenarian mother for the week of events. The novella is a subtle and astute satire discussing the nature of art institutions, glamorization and idolization of artists, mother-son relationships, and the nature of art in a post-modern world. Whether Aira was creating an entertaining plot twist or lyrically exploring relationships in our modern world, Festival was a dense, and literary adventure.”

About César Aira

CÉSAR AIRA was born in Coronel Pringles, Argentina in 1949, and has lived in Buenos Aires since 1967. He taught at the University of Buenos Aires (about Copi and Rimbaud) and at the University of Rosario (Constructivism and Mallarmé), and has translated and edited books from France, England, Italy, Brazil, Spain, Mexico, and Venezuela. Perhaps one of the most prolific writers in Argentina, and certainly one of the most talked about in Latin America, Aira has published more than 100 books to date in Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Chile, and Spain, which have been translated for France, Great Britain, Italy, Brazil, Portugal, Greece, Austria, Romania, Russia, and the United States. One novel, La prueba, has been made into a feature film, and How I Became a Nun was chosen as one of Argentina’s ten best books. Besides essays and novels Aira writes regularly for the Spanish newspaper El País. In addition to winning the 2021 Formentor Prize, he has received a Guggenheim scholarship, and was shortlisted for the Rómulo Gallegos prize and the Booker International Prize.

 

Katherine Silver

Katherine Silver's award-winning translations include works by María Sonia Cristoff, Daniel Sada, César Aira, Julio Cortázar, Juan Carlos Onetti, and Julio Ramón Ribeyro. The author of Echo Under Story, she volunteers as an interpreter for asylum seekers.

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