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About This Book

A sequence of linked prose pieces blends travel sketches, anecdotal encounters, and dreamlike digressions. The narrator moves through urban streets and cafés, meeting eccentric figures whose memories and monologues unfold into fantastical tales merging folklore, religious imagery, and personal recollection. Scenes shift between vivid detail and visionary reflection, often collapsing chronological boundaries and unsettling identity and time. The prose alternates ironic observation with lyrical reverie, assembling varied vignettes into a mosaic that examines how myth, memory, and anecdote together reshape perception and artistic imagination.

About the Author

Apollinaire, Guillaume portrait

Guillaume Apollinaire

Guillaume Apollinaire was a French poet, playwright, and art critic, known for his innovative contributions to modern poetry and his role in the development of Surrealism. Born in 1880, he is celebrated for his unique style that blends traditional forms with avant-garde techniques. His notable works include "Alcools," a collection that showcases his experimentation with free verse, and "Calligrammes," which features poems arranged in visual forms. Apollinaire's writings often reflect his fascination with art and the tumultuous experiences of his time, particularly during World War I. He remains a significant figure in 20th-century literature, influencing generations of poets and artists.

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