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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Bolaño, Roberto, 1953-2003.
Uniform title:Short stories. English. Selections
Imprint:New York : New Directions Pub., c2010.
Description:199 p. ; 21 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8063842
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other uniform titles:Andrews, Chris, 1962-
Bolaño, Roberto, 1953-2003. Llamadas telefónicas. English. Selections.
Bolaño, Roberto, 1953-2003. Putas asesinas. English. Selections.
ISBN:9780811217156 (cloth : alk. paper)
0811217159 (cloth : alk. paper)
Notes:"These stories are selected from two volumes Originally published by Editorial Anagrama, Barcelona, Spain, Llamadas telefonicas (1997) and Putas asesinas (2001)."
Review by New York Times Review

THE Chilean writer Roberto Bolaño has to be one of the most improbable international literary celebrities since William Burroughs and Henry Miller, two writers whose work Bolaño's occasionally resembles. His subjects are sex, poetry, death, solitude, violent crime and the desperate glimmers of transcendence that sometimes attend them. The prose is dark, intimate and sneakily touching. His lens is largely (though not literally) autobiographical, and seems narrowly focused at first. There are no sweeping historical gestures in Bolaño. Yet he has given us a subtle portrait of Latin America during the last quarter of the 20th century - a period of death squads, exile, "disappeared" citizens and state-sponsored terror. The nightmarish sense of human life being as discardable as clay permeates his writing. Readers trying to navigate Bolaño's gathering body of work may find themselves wondering where to turn: since his death in 2003, 12 of his books have been published in the United States. "The Insufferable Gaucho" would be an excellent place to start. The title story of this collection is one of Bolaño's most powerful fictions. It is a reimagining of Borges's story "The South," an emblematic tale of the schism that has plagued South America's republics for almost two centuries: between the capital cities with their totems to European culture, and the vast, serenely violent countryside that surrounds them. In Borges's story, the protagonist has survived a fever that brought him to the brink of death. He sets out from Buenos Aires to convalesce at his ancestral ranch on the Pampas. On arriving, he goes to the general store where a drunken tough lures him into a fight that honor won't permit him to decline. Clutching a knife he hardly knows how to wield, he walks resignedly and without fear into the death that "he would have chosen or dreamt" had he been given the chance. In Bolaño's version, the protagonist, Pereda, heads south after the collapse of the Argentine peso. What he finds on the Pampas is a sense of desertion and impotence. The gauchos have sold their horses and get around on bicycles or on foot. There are no cattle, only a proliferating scourge of rabbits. Having surrendered their ferocity, the gauchos are reduced to hunting the pests for food. Pereda gives them pep talks: "We have fallen, we're down . . . but we can still pick ourselves up and go to our deaths like men." During an argument he challenges the gauchos to a knife fight, believing his fate, like that of Borges's character in "The South," will be sealed. But the gauchos recoil: "Pereda felt that the shame of the nation or the continent had turned them into tame cats." In the end, he does use his knife, against a 50-year-old writer with an "adolescent air" who insults him in a literary cafe in Buenos Aires. In "Police Rat" Bolaño, with his taste for the subterranean life, vividly imagines a community of rats. Hard-working, co-operative and exquisitely polite, they are the fortunate members of a society where violent crime is unheard of. Every once in a while an artist is born among them. "As a general rule, we don't make fun of those individuals. On the contrary, we pity them, because we know that they're condemned to solitude. Why? Well, because creating works of art and contemplating them are activities in which our people . . . are unable to take part." Even in this modest version of utopia, the artist is doomed. The stories in "The Return" are less even. Some are mere character sketches; others read like barroom tales that would have been better off left unpublished. "William Burns," about an American who kills a man who may or may not be stalking two women, seems especially pointless. But there is gold to be found in this collection as well. The narrator of "Prefiguration of Lalo Cura" is the son of a porn star. He was raised in a neighborhood in Medellín, Colombia, called the Impaled. His father, an itinerant preacher, abandoned his wife before the son was born. At the age of 19, Lalo watches the movies his mother starred in while she was pregnant with him, "crying my eyes out, grinding my teeth, pinching the sides of my head." He is sure that he remembers seeing and feeling these penetrations in the womb. Disturbing as they are, Lalo can't help admiring the artistry of the movies; they seem to offer a glimpse into the mysteries of existence. "The sadness of the phallus," he says, was something the filmmaker "understood better than anyone. I mean the sadness of those monumental members against the backdrop of this vast and desolate continent." Bolaño's alter ego, Arturo Belano, pops up in several stories. In "Detectives," two veteran cops remember holding Belano as a prisoner after the Chilean coup that overthrew President Allende in 1973. They were classmates with Belano in high school and are inclined to protect him, though they just as easily could have shot him through the head and "come up with any old explanation." When Belano passes a mirror on the way to the bathroom he tells one of his former classmates that what he sees is the face of a complete stranger. The cop looks in the glass and fails to recognize himself as well. The atrocities have carried them so far from themselves that they have become something other, mixed up with the faces of the other prisoners and their guards who have also been alchemized into strangers. In "Photos," Arturo Belano is "lost in Africa," like one of his creator's heroes, Arthur Rimbaud. Sitting in the dust of a village "forsaken by god and abandoned by the human race," he leafs through an anthology of French poetry someone has left behind. He peers at the author photographs, ruminating on desire, projection, on the poets who are burned, "even the bad ones, on those burning bridges that are so enticing, so fascinating when you're 18, or 21, but then so dull, so monotonous." With Bolaño you rarely feel beset by monotony. Certainly not in "Antwerp," a tiny, unclassifiable book that will be of interest mainly to his most devoted fans. Bolaño completed it in 1980, but didn't publish it until a year before he died. "I wrote this book for myself, and even that I can't be sure of," he tells us in the preface. The short sections are like prose poems - a bridge of sorts between Bolaño's fiction and poetry - with such cryptic titles as "A Monkey," "There Was Nothing," "Big Silver Waves." Though not easily comprehensible, each section presents the reader with at least one startling line. A boy and a girl in "Cleaning Utensils," for example, weep "like characters from different movies projected on the same screen." In an essay titled "Literature + Illness = Illness," in "The Insufferable Gaucho," Bolaño confronts his own impending death, at the age of 50, from liver disease. He compares a patient's voyage on a gurney - "from his room to the operating theater, where masked men and women await him, like bandits from the sect of the Hashishin" - to a hazardous 19th-century voyage where the traveler gives up everything. The best of these stories confirm Bolaño's ideal of literature as a voyage to the zero degree of human existence, to the abyss, as Baudelaire, another of his heroes, would call it, where we lose the self in order to find it again. Bolaños subjects are sex, poetry, death, solitude, violent crime and desperate glimmers of transcendence. Michael Greenberg is the author of "Hurry Down Sunshine" and "Beg, Borrow, Steal: A Writer's Life." He writes the Accidentalist column for Bookforum.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 19, 2010]
Review by Booklist Review

The late Bolaño, a Chilean writer whose posthumous reputation only grows as more of his works are translated into English, practiced the short story and the novel with equal genius. This new collection of 13 stories proves to be a defining sampler of Bolaño's style, thematic concerns, and favored character types. Stories involving love on the skids, sexual situations gone wrong, and breakups looming around the corner find their place in the rough-and-tumble lives of cops, gangsters, writers, political fomenters ( At the time I used to hang out with anarchists and radical feminists and the books I read were more or less influenced by the company I was keeping ), and even a ghost and a necrophiliac. Obvious autobiographical elements populate his stories, especially those dealing with writers' lives and repressive dictatorial times (Bolaño suffered imprisonment during the Pinochet era). At odds, intriguingly, with the bleak characters he depicts is his sensitive style ( She had long brown hair, and her simple ponytail gathered all the grace in the world ).--Hooper, Brad Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Translator Chris Andrews deserves enormous recognition for introducing America to Bolano with Night in Chile back in 2003. Now, with the Bolano 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 Bolano 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. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In 2007, New Directions published a collection called Last Evenings on Earth, which includes selections from two Bolano collections, Llamadas telefonicas and Putas asesinas. The present collection contains the remaining 13 short stories from those two volumes. Since the overall literary value of both translated collections is pretty much equal, one wonders why the publisher did not issue them as they originally appeared. In many ways, these miniature gems are vintage Bolano. Since the stories take place in places like Barcelona and Russia, far from Bolano's Chilean homeland, they emphasize exile, one of his thematic constants. The often frustrating open endings and framed narrative appear in the author's narrations. Among the characters are the omnipresent author's alter ego and women of easy virtue (porn stars and prostitutes). A bizarre sense of humor (in one story the main character subsists on instant mashed potatoes) often clashes with the macabre (the necrophilia of "The Return" and the spectral encounter in "Meeting with Enrique Lihn"). -Verdict Despite the skimpy plots, dark mood, and unusual ambiance, these dozen stories will help perpetuate the almost mythic posthumous fame of Bolano and may be more accessible than the brilliant but superlengthy 2666.-Lawrence Olszewski, OCLC Lib., Dublin, OH (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by New York Times Review


Review by Booklist Review


Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by Library Journal Review