To Tell a Story
No ficció , 2026
Canongate
Pàgines 160
Published for the first time, John Berger and Susan Sontag’s collaboration and correspondence across a quarter-century offers a rare glimpse into the minds of two intellectual giants of the twentieth century. Edited by Benoît Bourreau.
Despite their status as intellectual giants of the twentieth century, John Berger and Susan Sontag’s artistic collaboration – and intense friendship – remains virtually unknown.
Published for the first time, To Tell a Story offers a glimpse into their shared history that spanned nearly a quarter-century. From sources such as their eponymous film broadcast, rare personal letters and archival recordings, the composite fragments build a portrait of a relationship that was often lively and challenging, sometimes trivial and always affectionate.
Berger and Sontag’s voices echo throughout these pages, riffing off the other as they grapple with their respective concerns. Above all, their conversations reveal a deep reciprocal admiration and an exchange of ideas about storytelling, the self and society that informed their own work..
“One of the most influential intellectuals of our time." The Observer
“Pick up almost any text and you will find risk and surprise, and sentence after sentence energized by intellectual curiosity and an intimate and intense gaze on the world” Times Literary Supplement
”Praise for Susan Sontag: ‘Stylistically acute and sharply perspicacious” The Times
“An aesthete who reorientated cultural horizons” The Guardian
“A public intellectual, a person with the right, even the duty, to put forth ideas, as a contribution to the society’s discussion of its life” The New Yorker
