Mario Vargas Llosa surveys the readings that have shaped the way he thinks and has viewed the world over the past fifty years.
What The Reviewers Say
David Pryce-Jones,
The Wall Street Journal
Human beings like to believe that it is possible to build a collective society where everyone will be happy. The duty of intellectuals is to show the world as it really is—what is to be hoped for, and what is to be feared. Mario Vargas Llosa does his duty very well..
Houman Barekat,
The Irish Times (IRE)
Each essay comprises a pen portrait of its subject’s life and works, combining a brisk biographical overview with a succinct summary of their particular contribution to the doctrine of liberalism. Cumulatively, they form a neat potted history of an intellectual tradition.
David Keymer,
Library Journal
The best essay in this book is on Isaiah Berlin, who argued that humans hold ideals that don’t fit together; they have to work out ways to accommodate them through compromise and tolerance of difference.
Kirkus
Vargas Llosa describes this thoughtful, reflective book as an autobiographical and intellectual road map to his journey.