![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() For these stick-in-the-muds, he grants permission to read the novel in traditional sequence, from chapters 1 through 56, but he then asks them to ignore the remaining 99 chapters - more than 200 pages of text! Which raises the obvious question: can my friend learn anything from peeking at the last page, if it doesn’t really contain the end of the novel? To make matters more interesting, he asks readers to skip chapter 55 completely (I will admit I cheated and read it anyway), and to read one of the chapters twice.ĭoes that sound confusing? Well, Cortázar has some pity on those narrow-minded souls still caught up in the antiquated linear reading paradigm. He invites them to start the novel at chapter 73 and then proceed through the novel’s 155 sections in a prescribed order - Cortázar gives a list of the alternative sequence in his “Table of Instructions” - leaping back and forth in the book, until they finally finish, having already read 132 through 155, with chapter 131. Julio Cortázar has left even bolder suggestions for readers of his experimental novel Hopscotch, published 50 years ago today, June 28. “I want to make sure it has a good ending,” he explained. ![]() I ONCE MET A MAN who claimed he always read the last paragraph of any novel before he turned to page one. This article originally appeared on the L.A. ![]()
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