The Dialogue of the Dogs
The Dialogue of the Dogs
Miguel de Cervantes



"Ever since I could chase a bone, I've longed to talk...."

The first talking-dog story in Western literature—from the writer generally acknowledged, alongside William Shakespeare, as the founding father of modern literature, no less?

Indeed, The Dialogue of the Dogs features, in a condensed, powerful version, all the traits the author of Don Quixote is famous for: It's a picaresque rich in bawdy humor, social satire, and fantasy, and it uses story tactics that were innovative at the time, such as the philandering husband who, given syphilis by his wife, is hospitalized. Late one feverish night he overhears the hospital's guard dogs telling each other their life's story—a wickedly ironic tale within the tale within the tale, wherein the two virtuous canines find themselves victim, time and again, to deceitful, corrupt humanity.

Here in a sparkling new translation, the parody of a Greek dialogue is so entertaining it belies the stunningly prescient sophistication of this novella—that it is a story about telling stories, and about creating a new way to discuss morality that isn't rooted in empiricism. In short, it's a masterful work that flies in the face of the forms and ethics of its time...and perhaps ours as well.

Title The Dialogue of the Dogs
Author Miguel de Cervantes
Publisher Melville House
Dewey Classification 863.3
Title First Published 01 March 2008
Format Paperback
Nb of pages 128 p.
ISBN-10 1933633042
ISBN-13 9781933633046
Publication Date 01 March 2008
Main content page count 128
Weight 16 oz.
List Price $10.00
 


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