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Book review: Pope Francis: Conversations, with Jose Bergoglio

Pope Francis collects a series of interviews by two Argentinian journalists with José Bergoglio dating from 2010 when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires.

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Pope Francis is known to want a church which is poor and with the poor, and he has reached out to slum dwellers in the past. Photo: Reuters

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by Francesca Ambrogetti and Sergio Rubin

G.P. Putnam's Sons

collects a series of interviews by two Argentinian journalists with José Bergoglio dating from 2010 when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires. In the brief period since he was elected pope, his unassuming warmth and sympathy for the poor have aroused interest.

One of the interviews concerns his private life, while the rest are devoted to his priestly behaviour and his policies.
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Bergoglio, born in 1936, is the eldest of five children of an accountant who emigrated from Piedmont, north Italy, and an Italian-Argentinian mother. As a teenager he had a girlfriend, played basketball, was a keen soccer fan, and enjoyed the tango and another Argentinian dance, the milonga. After working for four years as a nutrition analyst, at the age of 21 he decided to become a priest of the Jesuit order. After developing pneumonia, part of a lung was removed.

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