In Letters from a Seducer, Hilst describes the everyday life of Karl, a wealthy, erudite, and amoral man who seeks an answer to his incomprehension of life through sex. Karl writes and sends twenty provocative letters to Cordelia, his chaste sister. The letters' text becomes intertwined with the life of the poet Stamatius, who finds Karl's letters in the trash, as Hilst constructs an ingenious mirror play between the two that casts strange light on questions of amorality, sexuality and the spirit. Linguistically rich and endlessly playful, Letters from a Seducer is a work of perverse genius by one of Brazil's greatest modern writers.
A grand, perturbing erotic novel in which the wealthy, amoral Karl records his sexual life and search for meaning in letters with a surprising legacy
Maybe all women wonder what men would be like without their posturing, but it seems to me Hilst had more than an inkling... Dodie Bellamy
This epistolary novel tells the story of Karl, a wealthy, amoral and erudite man who records his daily life in a series of 20 letters to his sister Cordelia. She is cloistered and chaste, but the letters are wildly promiscuous not just in their explicit sexual content, which have earned the novel the epithet pornographic, but in their form. Ranging in style and register from modernist fragments worthy of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, to letters that could have been penned by Enlightenment libertines like Choderlos de Laclos and the Marquis de Sade, the letters make up a polyphonic text that pushes the boundaries both of fiction and of decency.
The novel a standalone masterpiece which originally appeared as part of a Brazilian tetralogy changes form again partway through, when the indigent poet Stamatius finds Karls record of his erotic adventures in a trash can, and begins to write stories based on what he reads, and then to break down those stories into even briefer fragments. Karls letters inspire Stamatius writing, and their narratives and identities become ever more fragmented, until we begin to doubt whether they are truly separate people. What unites them is an abundantly lewd imagination and a fantastically creative relationship to the greatest seducer of all: language.
Maybe all women wonder what men would be like without their posturing, but it seems to me Hilst had more than an inkling... Dodie Bellamy
This epistolary novel tells the story of Karl, a wealthy, amoral and erudite man who records his daily life in a series of 20 letters to his sister Cordelia. She is cloistered and chaste, but the letters are wildly promiscuous not just in their explicit sexual content, which have earned the novel the epithet pornographic, but in their form. Ranging in style and register from modernist fragments worthy of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, to letters that could have been penned by Enlightenment libertines like Choderlos de Laclos and the Marquis de Sade, the letters make up a polyphonic text that pushes the boundaries both of fiction and of decency.
The novel a standalone masterpiece which originally appeared as part of a Brazilian tetralogy changes form again partway through, when the indigent poet Stamatius finds Karls record of his erotic adventures in a trash can, and begins to write stories based on what he reads, and then to break down those stories into even briefer fragments. Karls letters inspire Stamatius writing, and their narratives and identities become ever more fragmented, until we begin to doubt whether they are truly separate people. What unites them is an abundantly lewd imagination and a fantastically creative relationship to the greatest seducer of all: language.
- | Author: Hilda Hilst, John Keene
- | Publisher: Pushkin Press
- | Publication Date: May 22, 2025
- | Number of Pages:
- | Language: eng
- | Binding: Paperback / softback
- | ISBN-13: 9781805331384
- | ISBN-10: 1805331388
- Author:
- Hilda Hilst, John Keene
- Publisher:
- Pushkin Press
- Publication Date:
- May 22, 2025
- Language:
- eng
- Binding:
- Paperback / softback
- ISBN-13:
- 9781805331384
- ISBN10:
- 1805331388