Á ventura by Teixeira de Pascoais

(11 User reviews)   2477
By Aiden Mancini Posted on Jan 17, 2026
In Category - Creative Living
Pascoais, Teixeira de, 1877-1952 Pascoais, Teixeira de, 1877-1952
Portuguese
Hey, I just finished this wild little book from 1911 called 'Á ventura' by a Portuguese poet named Teixeira de Pascoais. It's not your typical adventure story at all. Imagine a man so tired of modern life, with all its rules and clocks and predictability, that he just... walks away. He leaves his house, his job, everything behind, and decides to live purely by chance. He flips a coin at every crossroads, follows strangers on a whim, and sleeps wherever night finds him. The real conflict isn't against pirates or villains—it's a battle happening inside his own head. Can a person truly escape themselves by surrendering completely to luck? Or is this grand experiment in freedom just another kind of prison he's building? It's a short, strange, and surprisingly intense read about the cost of wanting to be absolutely free.
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I picked up 'Á ventura' knowing nothing about Portuguese literature from the early 1900s, and I'm so glad I did. It's a novel that feels more like a long, philosophical poem about a man's search for a life without a map.

The Story

The plot is deceptively simple. Our unnamed hero, fed up with the planned, predictable nature of his existence, makes a radical decision. He vows to live 'by adventure'—'á ventura.' He abandons his home and sets out into the world with no goal, no destination, and no plan. His only rule is to follow chance. A turn in the road is decided by a tossed coin. A conversation with a stranger might lead him miles off course. He sleeps in fields, wanders through villages, and observes life from the outside. The story follows this seemingly aimless journey, but the real drama is internal. We watch him wrestle with loneliness, the fading memory of his old life, and the haunting question of whether his glorious freedom is actually just a deep, self-imposed emptiness.

Why You Should Read It

This isn't an action-packed romp. It's a moody, reflective dive into a single, powerful idea. Pascoais writes with a poet's eye, painting landscapes and moments of quiet revelation that really stick with you. The protagonist isn't always likable—he can be arrogant and detached—but his struggle feels incredibly human. Who hasn't dreamed, even for a moment, of throwing it all away and just seeing where the wind takes you? The book doesn't give easy answers. Instead, it walks you right up to the edge of that fantasy and lets you feel both its thrilling promise and its cold, hard reality.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love character-driven stories and don't mind a slower, more thoughtful pace. If you enjoyed the existential wanderings in books like 'Siddhartha' or the atmospheric, introspective feel of some European classics, you'll find a lot to love here. It's a book for a quiet afternoon, one that will leave you staring out the window, thinking about your own roads taken and not taken. A beautiful, challenging little gem from a voice most of us have never heard.

William Lopez
1 year ago

Very helpful, thanks.

5
5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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