“Jorge Luis Borges 1951, by Grete Stern.” Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Over the years the recommendation robots of Amazon and other online services seem to be usurping the role of the librarian. I do not know if this is ultimately good or bad—we may see in the future artificially intelligent librarians emerge from the web, personal literary assistants with impeccable taste and sensitivity. But at present, I find something lacking in online curation cultivated by algorithms. (I have a similar nostalgia for the bygone video store clerk.) Yes, customers who bought this book also bought others I might like, but what, tell me, would a genuine reader recommend?

A reader, say, like that arch reader Jorge Luis Borges, “one of the most well read men in history,” writes Grant Munroe at The Rumpus. Part of the thrill of discovering Borges resides in discovering all of the books he loved, both real and imaginary. The author always points to his sources. Borges, after all, “presented the genius of Pierre Menard, author of the Quixote [a story about writing as scrupulously faithful rewriting] by first carefully enumerating each book found in Menard’s personal library.” Borges himself, some readers may know, wrote the bulk of the short stories for which he’s known while working at a library in Buenos Aires, a job he described in his 1970 essay “Autobiographical Notes” as “nine solid years of unhappiness.”









Although he disliked the bureaucratic boredom of library work, Borges was better suited than perhaps anyone for a curatorial role. Given this reputation, Borges was asked more than once to select his favorite novels and stories for published anthologies. One such multi-volume project, titled Personal Library, saw Borges selecting 74 titles for an Argentine publisher between 1985 and his death in 1988. In another, Borges chose “a list of authors,” Monroe writes, “whose works were selected to fill 33 volumes in The Library of Babel, a 1979 Spanish language anthology of fantastic literature edited by Borges, named after his earlier story by the same name.”

Monroe tracked down all of the titles Borges chose for the eclectic anthology, “a fun, brilliant, polyglot collection” that includes a great many of the author's perennial favorites, many of which you'll recognize from their mentions in his fiction and essays. Below, we reproduce Monroe's reconstruction of the 33 Library of Babel volumes, with links to those works available free online. Unfortunately, many of these stories are not available in translation. Others, such as those of Leon Bloy, have just become available in English since Monroe's 2009 article. Thanks to his diligence, we can enjoy having Jorge Luis Borges as our personal librarian.

The Library of Babel

(Note: The titles of all stories currently without a proper translation into English have been left in their original language.)

(Also note: All stories marked with [c] are still protected by US copyright law. Only residents of the UK and Australia can legally click on the hyperlink provided.)

Jack London, The Concentric Deaths

Jorge Luis Borges, August 26, 1983

(All but the last three articles are available in Penguin’s Borges: The Collected Fictions.) “August 26, 1983″

“The Rose of Peracelsus”

“Blue Tigers”

“Shakespeare’s Memory”

An Interview with Borges, with Maria Esther Vasquez

A Chronology of J.L. Borges’ Life, from Siruela Magazine

The Ruler and Labyrinth: An Approximation of J.L Borges’ Bibliography, by Fernandez Ferrer

Gustav Meyrink, Cardinal Napellus[ii]

“Der Kardinal Napellus”

“J.H. Obereits Besuch bei den Zeitegeln”

“Der Vier Mondbrüder”

Léon Bloy, Disagreeable Tales

[All available in a translation published just this year] “La Taie d’Argent”

“Les Captifs de Longjumeau”

“Une Idée Médiocre”

“Une Martyre”

“La Plus Belle Trouvaille de Caïn”

“On n’est pas Parfait”

“La Religion de M. Pleur”

“Terrible Châtiment d’un Dentiste”

“La Tisane”

“Tout Ce Que Tu Voudras!”

“La Dernière Cuite”

“Le Vieux de la Maison”

Giovanni Papini, The Mirror That Fled

“Il Giorno Non Restituito”

“Due Immagini in una Vasca”

“Lo Specchio che Fugge”

“Storia Completamente Assurda”

“Il Mendicante di Anime”

“Una Morte Mentale”

“Non Voglio Più Essere Ciò che Sono”

“Chi Sei?”

“Il Suicida Sostituto”

“L’ultima Visita del Gentiluomo Malato”

Oscar Wilde, Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime

Villiers de L’Isle-Adam, El Convidado de las Últimas Festivas

(Used copies of the 1985 Oxford U. Press translation of Cruel Tales (the collection in which these stories are published) are available online.)

“L’Aventure de Tsé-i-la”

“Le Convive des Dernières Fêtes”

“A Torture By Hope” [trans. 1891]

“La Reine Ysabeau”

“Sombre Récit Conteur Plus Sombre”

“L’Enjeu”

“Véra”

Pedro Antonio de Alarcón, El Amigo de la Muerte

“El Amigo de la Muerte” [or “The Strange Friend of Tito Gil”]

“The Tall Woman”

Herman Melville, Bartleby the Scrivener

William Beckford, Vathek

Vathek, a novella.

H.G. Wells, The Door in the Wall

Pu Songling, The Tiger Guest [iii]

Arthur Machen, The Shining Pyramid

Robert Louis Stevenson, The Isle of Voices [iv]

G.K. Chesterton, The Eye of Apollo

Jacques Cazotte, The Devil in Love

(A new translation is available from Dedalus Press of the UK.) The Devil in Love, a novella.

“Jacquez Cazotte,” an essay by Gerard de Nerval

Franz Kafka, The Vulture

Edgar Allan Poe, The Purloined Letter

Leopoldo Lugones, The Pillar of Salt

(A new translation of Lugones’ stories, published by The Library of Latin America, is available at Powell’s.) “The Pillar of Salt”

“Grandmother Julieta”

“The Horses of Abdera”

“An Inexplicable Phenomenon”

“Francesca”

“Rain of Fire: An Account of the Immolation of Gomorra”

Rudyard Kipling, The Wish House

The Thousand and One Nights, According to Galland

The Thousand and One Nights, According to Burton

Henry James, The Friends of the Friends

Voltaire, Micromegas

Charles Hinton, Scientific Romances

Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Great Stone Face

Lord Dunsany, The Country of Yann

Saki, The Reticence of Lady Anne

Russian Tales

Argentinean Tales

J.L. Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares, New Stories of H. Bustos Domecq

(Available at Amazon.com.)

The Book of Dreams (A Collection of Recounted Dreams)

Borges A to Z (A Compilation)

via The Rumpus

Related Content:

Jorge Luis Borges Selects 74 Books for Your Personal Library

Jorge Luis Borges’ 1967-8 Norton Lectures On Poetry (And Everything Else Literary)

Visit The Online Library of Babel: New Web Site Turns Borges’ “Library of Babel” Into a Virtual Reality

Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness