Recent Reading: Carlos Fuentes' Christopher Unborn


As a way of celebrating Hispanic Heritage month, I have been reading Christopher Unborn, a novel by the late Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes.  I enjoyed this passage on building a better mousetrap that I read yesterday:

Moved by this scientific and humanitarian concern, which distanced them so greatly from my mother Isabella's family, they proceeded to invent a mousetrap for the poor in which the owner would put, instead of a piece of real cheese, the photograph of a piece of cheese. The photograph was an integral part of the invention, which would be sold (or distributed) with the color photo of a magnificent piece of Roquefort cheese standing upright in the trap. Excited, your grandparents set about testing the device at home, as they always did. They left the trap in the basement one night and eagerly returned in the morning to see the results.

The trap had worked. The photograph of the cheese had disappeared. But in its place my grandparents found the photo of a mouse.

They didn't know whether to treat this result as a success or failure. In any case, they did not lose hope; instead, they derived the following corollary: if the representation of matter, its reproduction, is complemented by an opposite term, it must be possible to isolate this relationship within matter itself, seeking within each object in the universe the principle of antimatter, the potential twin of the object. To make the antimatter materialize at the instant matter disappears became the concentrated, obsessive avenue of your grandparents' genius... (pp 55-56).


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