
For the first time in Spanish, the selected poems of Mircea Cărtărescu are brought together, the crystalline essence of the early creative years of a brilliant writer. Cărtărescu, before becoming the masterful storyteller we know, was a young poet. A member of the group of rebellious writers known as the "Blue Jeans Generation," poetry meant for him a special way of seeing things. An insect, a bridge, or a mathematical equation; a phrase from Plato or a principle of biology; a smile or a Zen Buddhist koan: everything was poetry. Cărtărescu wrote hundreds of poems during his youth. "We devoured bread with poetry. Our world was pain, but it was also beauty. And everything that is beautiful and ideal is poetry." But one day, when he was around thirty, he decided he would never write another verse again. However, Cărtărescu never ceased to be a poet, and his legacy remains.






