Blindness

Paperback, 352 pages

English language

Published Nov. 19, 1999 by Harvest Books.

ISBN:
978-0-15-600775-7
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
42466942

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (7 reviews)

Una ceguera blanca se expande de manera fulminante. Internados en cuarentena o perdidos por la ciudad, los ciegos deben enfrentarse a lo más primitivo de la especie humana: la voluntad de sobrevivir a cualquier precio.

José Saramago, Premio Nobel de Literatura 1998, teje una aterradora parábola acerca del ser humano, que encierra lo más sublime y miserable de nosotros mismos.

25 editions

Visionary

5 stars

Blindness tells of an epidemic where the world sees white. The result is a societal dystopia, first in quarantine and then in a world of the blind. Food is scarce, filth is everywhere, and any small injury could be fatal.

José Saramago was one of a kind, a unique storyteller and gifted artist who always had something to say, and always said it with such a brilliant prose, translated with equal skill by his two main translators. This is among his best books, an example of how he can make the societal personal, and can make even a very unlikely story seem deeply real and troubling.

Ziemlich deprimierend

4 stars

Das Buch während einer echten Pandemie zu lesen, kickt auch noch mal anders.

Hier greift eine Seuche um sich, die die Menschen plötzlich blind werden lässt. Zuerst versucht man, die Infizierten in Quarantäne zu stecken, doch nach und nach bricht alles zusammen und das schlechteste im Menschen kommt zum Vorschein. Nur eine Frau die nicht blind ist (aber so tut als ob, damit sie bei ihrem Mann bleiben kann), hat zumindest die Möglichkeit, den anderen ein wenig zu helfen und geht dabei weit über ihre Grenzen.

Review of 'Blindness' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

the plot alone of this book makes a great hook: a dystopian future brought about by contagious blindness. it's got all the hallmarks of a survival story without invoking zombies or a plague. when a character worries that fear of going blind might actually cause the blindness (and then goes blind), the reader becomes doubly afraid for themselves; it's no longer a book you are reading but an immediate and tangible Armageddon that could befall you in the next second.
this book reminded me of The Alchemist in that it has a loose story structure where many contemplations hang. there must be something about the Portuguese language that makes it compatible with philosophical thinking; perhaps there is an abundance of proverbs? There were many proverbs about sight or being blind, both explicit and implied, in the story. And even that was an exercise in philosophy because so many of our …

Review of 'Blindness' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Very freaky to read, being blind myself. It got the blindness organisations (particular the US ones) up in arms. Personally I can't see what their problem is, it's not a very flattering portrayal of blind people, but it isn't intended to be. A great literary work, though, perhaps.

avatar for onepointzero

rated it

3 stars
avatar for IXI

rated it

3 stars
avatar for okwithmydecay

rated it

3 stars

Subjects

  • Blindness -- Fiction