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The Return

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Dark, intimate and sneakily touching . . . There is gold to be found in [The Return]." —Michael Greenberg, The New York Times Book Review
Composed of thirteen indelible stories, Roberto Bolaño's The Return is preoccupied with ghosts: troubled souls haunting society's margins, lovers lost to the ages, young men who no longer recognize themselves in the mirror, fresh corpses afforded no peace, departed poets who visit us in dreams. These tales capture the extremes of human experience—sex, violence, death—and the mundane acts that linger in between, with Bolaño's inimitable mordant humor and trenchant insight into what drives us. A master of the short form, Bolaño is as interested in the act of storytelling as he is in the stories themselves: how they nestle within one another; how they shift, spread, and scatter; and how they return to us again and again.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 3, 2010
      Translator Chris Andrews deserves enormous recognition for introducing America to Bolaño with Night in Chile back in 2003. Now, with the Bolaño renaissance in full swing and the backlog of untranslated works narrowing, Andrews culls the short stories omitted from Last Evenings on Earth. Save perhaps the title story—in which a dead man follows his body through an increasingly noxious series of abuses—the stories have a subdued and sketchlike quality, from underworld confessionals like “Snow” and “Joanna Silvestri,” to tender reminiscences like “Cell Mates” and the heartbreaking missed romance of “Clara.” Devotees of Bolaño will recognize the writer’s merciless (and often humorous) fusion of high art and dark human nature in small flights like “Meeting with Enrique Lihn” and comic bloodbaths like “William Burns,” though mercy plays a surprising role in several of the stories, as in the incredible “Prefiguration of Lalo Cura,” in which the cast and crew of high-concept pornos face their late-life requiem. The initiated and dedicated have a welcome feast of small desolations.

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Languages

  • English

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