Já não há nada

Já não há nada
10 €

Author

Léo Ferré

Synopsis

His satirical humor undoes language, religion, marriage, urbanism, power and the exploitation of labor but also revolts and revolutions recovered and digested. This poem was important to many people who heard it: it makes you think. It is almost a summary of Ferré's thought at a given historical moment. It is the first Portuguese translation. After his concert at the Coliseu dos Recreios in Lisbon in 1982, several texts - prose and poetry - were published and published by Ulmeiro in 1984.

This larger poem is missing. His writing is a fierce, touching beauty with phrases phrased, unexpected, elided, filled with neologisms, popular expressions and slang. He is a great poet and singer to discover.

Orders

livraria@lerdevagar.com

Elementos de Geopolítica e Geoestratégia

Elementos de Geopolítica e Geoestratégia
25 €

Author

Gilberto Veríssimo

Synopsis

This work aims to contribute to the strengthening of the capacity and ability of those - civilian or military - who wish to assume public responsibility in the life of their country. It is true that policy must intervene in the planning of military actions, where the strategy is fully implemented; It is also true that the politician without preparation, knowledge, thought or strategic sensitivity will certainly create serious damage to the conduct of his country, to a future chosen in time of Peace.

Orders

livraria@lerdevagar.com

Descompasso

Descompasso
13.50 €

Author

Onofre dos Santos

Synopsis

The novel unfolds essentially in 1961-62, difficult and still little studied period of Portuguese History - lack distance. They were then President of the Council and Minister of Defense, Professor António de Oliveira Salazar, Minister of the Ultramar, Professor Doctor Adriano Moreira and Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces in Angola, General Venâncio Deslandes. It could be called "The Good, the Bad and the Villain", it is up to the reader to make his choice throughout the plot; or 'Disloyalty' because of the inability to take action ... so much was the 'Discomfort' at the end.

Orders

livraria@lerdevagar.com

World Literature Today: Ler Devagar

World Literature Today: Ler Devagar

Lisbon is a city with no shortage of literary monuments. Look at downtown Chiado, where Livraria Bertrand continues its 285-year-old bookselling business uninterrupted, a meek world record. Along this same street, fanned out in a subtle triangle, Portugal’s greatest poets are frozen midjest or midparagraph in larger-than-life bronzes—Fernando Pessoa’s figure now permanently occupying his usual table outside Café A Brasileira, where the city’s writers once congregated to smoke and write and take their coffee. It is almost (almost) as though time has not passed at all. But the writers no longer take their coffee there.

 

Standing out amid all these pieces of history is Ler Devagar, a nascent palace of book culture more interested in restoration than preservation. After a brief stint in Lisbon proper, the bookstore relocated to the city’s fringe, opting to take up residence in the ex-industrial premises of Alcântara’s rapidly revitalized LX Factory (pronounced “el sheesh”). Now a hub of precocious restaurants, boutiques, art, and design, the area seems a perfect fit for Ler Devagar’s own ethos: not a site of Lisbon’s literary history but a sign of its literary future.

Ler Devagar“Read slowly.” That’s the literal translation of this three-story bibliophile’s dream and the persistent invitation of the shop’s open space. The optics are, in a word, stunning. Books line the aisles on the first floor and climb up every spare inch of wall on all three. To one side a massive outmoded printing press sits like a column, providing a tucked-away space for a coffee and wine bar (one of two in the store, with a cake shop to boot) and an anchor-point for the signature airborne sculptures strung across the shop: fanciful cyclist silhouettes lending an air of magic to the catwalks and stacked platforms. This is a place you can explore for hours on end even before you get to the books, an inexhaustible collection of new and secondhand titles with their own worlds to offer in a number of tongues.

It’s also a place where people can meet, mix, and collaborate. Ler Devagar is evidently designed with conversation in mind: everywhere tables are distributed plentifully, in unfussy clusters fit for lively groups and small, neat rows for quiet couples. Rotating exhibitions and regular readings, performances, and workshops push Ler Devagar from a bookstore to a dedicated community arts space. A small, still-functioning press rests on the uppermost platform amid an exhibition- and work-space for local artists; on one occasion, at least, it has spit out the warm, inked sheets of one of Lisbon’s award-winning independent newspapers. Sectioned off from the rest of the shop is the auditorium, Ouvir Devagar (“listen slowly”), comprising a stage and a couple dozen chairs that, if the online events calendar is any indication, receive ample use these days.

Ler Devagar has been counted among the world’s most beautiful bookstores for a few years now, but its larger project of restoration in Lisbon and around the country has also made it one of Portugal’s most valuable cultural projects. Just one example: in 2013 Ler Devagar proposed a project to restore eight different disused spaces in the historical castle-town of Óbidos, turning them into book-minded shops and spaces like the Literary Man, a library-style hotel decked with over forty thousand titles.

Two years later Óbidos became one of UNESCO’s twenty “Cities of Literature,” officially making history rather than preserving it. Along the way, Ler Devagar has made something else that may be just as important: an ample number of places for writers to take their coffee.

By Grant Schatzman. Writer and editor in Norman, Oklahoma, and a student of English literature and letters at the University of Oklahoma.

Full Article: World Literature Today, November 2017

A viagem à Sicília de Alberto Caeiro

A viagem à Sicília de Alberto Caeiro

19.99 €

Author

Accursio Soldano

Synopsis

After a long and tiresome train journey through Sicily, Alberto Caeiro and his strange traveling companion arrive at a village on the South-West coast of the island, with the intention of visiting Filippo, an old sculptor of whom they have heard about.

Between Caeiro and this sullen Sicilian artist-peasant, sculpting heads on the rocks and trees of his farm overlooking the Mediterranean, a singular dialogue is established, the guiding thread of this amazing meeting in a land of farmers and fishermen. Under the burning sun of Sicily, the two travelers enter a labyrinthine world of ancestral tales and beliefs, traversing the narrow paths that separate reality from illusion.

Orders

livraria@lerdevagar.com