Roberto Bolano

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2666 coming out november 11,

outstanding reviews all over.can't wait to read it.

“Bolaño’s masterwork . . . An often shockingly raunchy and violent tour de force (though the phrase seems hardly adequate to describe the novel’s narrative velocity, polyphonic range, inventiveness, and bravery) based in part on the still unsolved murders of hundreds of women in Ciudad Juárez, in the Sonora desert near the Texas border.” —FRANCISCO GOLDMAN, The New York Review of Books

“Not just the great Spanish-language novel of [this] decade, but one of the cornerstones that define an entire literature.” —J. A. MASOLIVER RÓDENAS, La Vanguardia

“One of those strange, exquisite, and astonishing experiences that literature offers us only once in a very long time . . . to see . . . a writer in full pursuit of the Total Novel, one that not only completes his life’s work but redefines it and raises it to new dizzying heights.” —RODRIGO FRESÁN, El País

"Bolano's savoir-faire is incredible ... The exploded narrative reveals a virtuosity that we rarely encounter, and one cannot help being bowled over by certain bravura passages--to single one out, the series of reports describing murdered young women, which is both magnificent and unbearable. We won't even mention the 'resolution' of this infernal 2666, a world of a novel in which the power of words triumphs over savagery." --Baptiste Liger, L'EXPRESS

"Splendid ... The jaw-dropping synthesis of a brief but incredibly fertile career." --Fabrice Gabriel, LES INROCKUPTIBLES

"The event of the spring: with 2666 Roberto Bolano has given us his most dense, complex, and powerful novel, a meditation on literature and evil that begins with a sordid newspaper item in contemporary Mexico." --Morgan Boedec, CHRONIC ART

"Including the imaginary and the mythic alongside the real in his historiography, without ever dabbling in the magical realism dear to many of his Latin-American peers, Bolano strews his chronicle with dreams and visions. As in the films of David Lynch (with whom Bolano's novel shares a certain kinship) these become a catalyst for reflection ... In such darkness, one must keep one's eyes wide open. Bolano invites us to do just that." --Sabine Audrerie, LA CROIX

"An immense moment for literature ... With prodigious skill and his inimitable art of digression, Bolano leads us to the gates of his own hell. May he burn in peace." --TECHNIKART

"Bolano constructs a chaos that has an order all its own ... The state of the world today transmuted into literature." --Isabelle Ruf, LE TEMPS

"To confront the reader with the horror of the contemporary world was Bolano's guiding ambition. He succeeded, to say the least. Upset, shocked, sometimes even sickened, at times one is tempted to shut the book because it's unbearable to read. Don't shut it. Far from being a blood-and-guts thriller meant to entertain, 2666 is a 'visceral realist" portrait of the human condition in the twenty-first century." --Anna Topaloff, MARIANNE

"On every page the reader marvels, hypnotized, at the capacity of this baroque writer to encompass all literary genres in a single fascinating, enigmatic story. No doubt many readers will find 2666 inexhaustible to interpretation. It is a fully realized work by a pure genius at the height of his powers." --LIRE

"His masterpiece ... Bolano borrows from vaudeville and the campus novel, from noir and pulp, from science fiction, from the Bildungsroman, from war novels; the tone of his writing oscillates between humor and total darkness, between the simplicity of a fairytale and the false neutrality of a police report." --Minh Tran Huy, LE MAGAZINE LITTERAIRE (Paris)

"The book explores evil with irony, without any theory or resolution, relying on storytelling alone as its saving grace... Each story is an adventure: a fresco at once horrifying, delicate, grotesque, redundant, and absurd, revealed by the flashlight of a child who stands at the threshold of a cave he will never leave." --Philippe Lancon, LIBERATION

"If THE SAVAGE DETECTIVES recounted the end of a century of avant-gardes and ideological battles, 2666, more radically, evokes the end of humanity as we know it. Apocalyptic in this sense, wavering between decomposition and totality, endlessly in love with people and books, Bolano's last novel ranges over the world and history like the knight Percival, who in Bolano's words 'wears his fool's motley underneath his armor.'" --Fabienne Dumontet, LE MONDE DES LIVRES (Paris)

"A work of genius: a work of immense lucidity and narrative cunning, written with a unique mixture of creative power and intimate existential desperation, the work of a master whose voice has all the authority and seeming effortlessness that we associate with the great classics of the ages ... It is impossible to read this book without feeling the earth shift beneath one's feet. It is impossible to venture deep into writing so unforgiving without feeling inwardly moved--by a shudder of fear, maybe even horror, but also by its need to pay attention, by its desire for clarity, by its hunger for the real." --Andres Ibanaz, BLANCO Y NEGRO

"Without a doubt the greatest of Bolano's productions ... The five parts of this masterwork can be read separately, as five isolated novels; none loses any of its brilliance, but what's lost is the grandeur that they achieve in combination, the grandeur of a project truly rare in fiction nowadays, one that can be enjoyed only in its totality." --Ana Maria Moix, EL PAIS

"Make no mistake, 2666 is a work of huge importance ... a complex literary experience, in which the author seeks to set down his nightmares while he feels time running out. Bolano inspires passion, even when his material, his era, and his volume seem overwhelming. This could only be published in a single volume, and it can only be read as one." --EL MUNDO

"An absolute masterpiece ... Bolano writes almost without adjectives, but in his prose this leads to double meanings. The narration is pure metonymy: it omits feelings in favor of facts. A phone call or a sex act can express real tragedy, the sweep of the vast human condition." --Andres Lomena, LA OPINION DE MALAGA

Zeno, Wednesday, 15 October 2008 14:56 (fifteen years ago) link

I've still got 2666 to read, in a pile that includes the Recognitions by Gaddis and Underworld by DeLillo. I think I'll get to it first, really liked detectives salvages a lot.

what U cry 4 (jim), Wednesday, 15 October 2008 14:58 (fifteen years ago) link

+ don't want to wait 'til next year to be reading it of course.

what U cry 4 (jim), Wednesday, 15 October 2008 14:58 (fifteen years ago) link

man that does sound exciting. just pre-ordered that 3 volume box set now.

t_g, Wednesday, 15 October 2008 15:05 (fifteen years ago) link

savage detective was awesome.
the ambivalent of Bolano's thoughts and feelings towards art and artists (supreme or pretentious/naive? maybe both at the same time)
is deliverd in a highly original way

Zeno, Wednesday, 15 October 2008 15:05 (fifteen years ago) link

oh man, i want to read this but after finishing infinite jest i don't think i'll want to read another 900+ pager

Jordan, Wednesday, 15 October 2008 16:16 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm put off by the size, but the boxed set is a thing of beauty

James Morrison, Wednesday, 15 October 2008 22:32 (fifteen years ago) link

i think i might order this as a present for myself to read once i'm done with this semester of grad school. i can't handle anything this heavy while i'm doing school, unfortunately

metametadata (n/a), Wednesday, 15 October 2008 22:40 (fifteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

^^yah me too. this might be my winter break book. heard mixed stuff about savage detectives but i may give this one a go.

Mr. Que, Friday, 7 November 2008 17:18 (fifteen years ago) link

savage detectives was great. i never actually ordered 2066, i should do that now.

metametadata (n/a), Friday, 7 November 2008 17:23 (fifteen years ago) link

done ... now i just need to forget i ordered it before next week so it'll be a pleasant surprise when it arrives

metametadata (n/a), Friday, 7 November 2008 17:29 (fifteen years ago) link

I ordered it a few days ago, along with Saramago's Death With Interruptions. I probably will not get a chance to start either until May 17th, 2009, my 26th birthday, graduate school graduation day, end of a personal nightmare, and beginning of the better part of my life. I'm really looking forward to that day.

z "R" s (Z S), Friday, 7 November 2008 17:29 (fifteen years ago) link

You could say that 2666 got a fairly positive review in the NYT today:

“2666” is the permanently mysterious title of a Bolaño manuscript rescued from his desk after his passing, the primary effort of the last five years of his life. The book was published posthumously in Spanish in 2004 to tremendous acclaim, after what appears to have been a bit of dithering over Bolaño’s final intentions — a small result of which is that its English translation (by Natasha Wimmer, the indefatigable translator of “The Savage Detectives”) has been bracketed by two faintly defensive statements justifying the book’s present form. They needn’t have bothered. “2666” is as consummate a performance as any 900-page novel dare hope to be: Bolaño won the race to the finish line in writing what he plainly intended, in his self-interrogating way, as a master statement. Indeed, he produced not only a supreme capstone to his own vaulting ambition, but a landmark in what’s possible for the novel as a form in our increasingly, and terrifyingly, post-national world. “The Savage Detectives” looks positively hermetic beside it.

z "R" s (Z S), Saturday, 8 November 2008 19:25 (fifteen years ago) link

"The Savage Detectives" is beautiful. I can't wait to see if "2666" lives up to the hype.

Brad C., Saturday, 8 November 2008 19:46 (fifteen years ago) link

just got 2666 in the mail. it looks beautiful

t_g, Friday, 14 November 2008 11:14 (fifteen years ago) link

me too

metametadata (n/a), Friday, 14 November 2008 13:40 (fifteen years ago) link

What do you think about the slip cover paperbacks versus the hardcover?

silence dogood, Friday, 14 November 2008 14:24 (fifteen years ago) link

i got the paperbacks but i kind of wish i'd gotten the hardcover. the package looks nice but i'm worried it's going to fall apart and start to look ratty very quickly

metametadata (n/a), Friday, 14 November 2008 14:26 (fifteen years ago) link

will be easier to read though

metametadata (n/a), Friday, 14 November 2008 14:26 (fifteen years ago) link

i got the hardcover. its not really that unwieldy tho i dont have any plans to be truckin it around

johnny crunch, Friday, 14 November 2008 14:31 (fifteen years ago) link

i got the paperbacks, because we're on vacation next week and it will be easier to carry around. the question is, do i take one volume or two??? don't think i will be able to get through all three in a week. though we have two long plane rides to get thru. i think i will hide the second volume in my luggage somewhere for the plane ride back.

Mr. Que, Friday, 14 November 2008 14:47 (fifteen years ago) link

got the paperbacks also, just bcz i hate lugging round hardcovers

t_g, Friday, 14 November 2008 15:23 (fifteen years ago) link

just bought the hardcover.
CANT WAIT TO READ (but have to wait, busy..)

Zeno, Saturday, 15 November 2008 01:46 (fifteen years ago) link

i pre-ordered 2666 (hardback) on amazon when i was really drunk, forgot about it, then a package showed up at my door, and i'm about 200 pages in. great, great, great.

mr. que i would honestly take v. 1 with you just because it seques so nicely into the v. 2 that i've read so far.

Matt P, Saturday, 15 November 2008 10:48 (fifteen years ago) link

no no i am taking vol. 1 the question is, will I be able to finish it in a week and should i take vol 2. along with me and the answer to both is yes. i am like 40 pages in so far and hubba hubba

Mr. Que, Saturday, 15 November 2008 14:00 (fifteen years ago) link

the part about the crimes is giving me nightmares

Matt P, Thursday, 20 November 2008 01:17 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm getting this through the library because I'm poor. Hopefully I can read it before it's due (since there will probably be a line for it by the time it's due).

_Rockist__Scientist_, Saturday, 22 November 2008 19:36 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah so i liked 2666 a lot. i loved the part about the crimes, which is the most haunting thing i have ever read, and i loved parts about everything else. i'm not a poetry reader and i'm not crazy and i'm not very well-read. i think being more of those things would have helped me enjoy this even more.

Jake Sexchamp (Matt P), Sunday, 23 November 2008 10:48 (fifteen years ago) link

bought this yesterday

some know what you dude last summer (Jordan), Sunday, 23 November 2008 15:30 (fifteen years ago) link

i think i said something out loud in the store when i saw how expensive books are these days, but then i figured eh, at least this one should last me a while.

some know what you dude last summer (Jordan), Sunday, 23 November 2008 15:31 (fifteen years ago) link

the box set was like $20 on amazon, which is really reasonable for a new book

n/a is just more of a character....in a genre polluted by clones (n/a), Sunday, 23 November 2008 19:48 (fifteen years ago) link

the two adjectives i would give 2666 are wild and uneven. it was a fun, fast read for me but i think i would have appreciated a little more cohesion between the 5 sections. . . just a touch more, really. highlights were all of sections 1 and 4 and the beginning of 5, until Archimboldio gets bogged down in WWII. 3 came off as this weird DeLillo-ish chunk. 2 seems a little pointless in retrospect. he's an interesting writer, the digressions just got a little old towards the end. considering how awesome 1 and 4 are, though, it hardly matters.

Mr. Que, Wednesday, 26 November 2008 16:25 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, list price on the hardcover at Borders was $30.

some know what you dude last summer (Jordan), Wednesday, 26 November 2008 18:53 (fifteen years ago) link

just about to start book 4, loving it (although 1 is definitely the best so far). i hit book 4 during a really choppy plane ride and didn't want to read about death and make myself even more tense. i like how the sections are connected, there are definite ties but it's not overdone (like if the reporter would've crossed paths with the critics in a cafe or whatever).

some know what you dude last summer (Jordan), Monday, 1 December 2008 22:04 (fifteen years ago) link

i agree 100% with this guy on 2666 http://quarterlyconversation.com/2666-by-roberto-bolano

Mr. Que, Monday, 1 December 2008 22:06 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm looking forward to the translations of his poetry, too.

― Z S, Sunday, March 30, 2008 8:12 PM (8 months ago) Bookmark

finally out btw

BIG HOOS'S poncho steencation (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Saturday, 6 December 2008 02:33 (fifteen years ago) link

I think I'm gonna read Savage Detectives as soon as I finish Yiddish Policeman's Union

BIG HOOS'S poncho steencation (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Saturday, 6 December 2008 02:34 (fifteen years ago) link

i'm somewhere around page 300, and for now, i think Savage Detectives is better.
2666 is a good,philosophical page turner but it has it's flaws, esp. with the somewhat too obscure surreal scenes, some of them impossible to decipher, but Bolani is talented and smart enough to keep me going.
maybe iill change my mind by the end.

Zeno, Saturday, 6 December 2008 15:42 (fifteen years ago) link

Anyone read The Romantic Dogs poetry collection? Some of them are pretty good. It also makes sense to read them in conjunction with the Savage Detectives, since many of them actually seem part of that book: esp. the ones about N. Parra, northern Mexico, la revolution, Spain

from one poem: "But back then, growing up would have been a crime"

donald nitchie, Friday, 12 December 2008 16:31 (fifteen years ago) link

"Notes Toward an Annotated Edition of 2666":

http://us.macmillan.com/BookCustomPage.aspx?isbn=9780374100148&m_type=4&m_contentid=5953#cmscontent

those are some very helpfull comments.

the book is getting better and better.(i'm in the middle)
it's the sort of a book one's need to get used to, i think.
David Lynch,Witold Gombrowicz, and the other Bolano's usuall suspects of influence are presented (Cortazar,Dellilo,Sebald and so on)
it's less focused than "savage",yes, (which wasnt focused as itself), but it's deeper, and more complex.
still, not a hard read.
Bolano gives a fresh, look at the old theme of life vs. death, logic vs. madness, order vs. chaos. etc.. while the latter will always win, trying to find the point of it all, art and life, with the horror of death around us.
so realism and surrealism collide together,with endless details, places and names creating a huge picture of the modern modern world on which we live in, where we can only imagine we have control over our lifes, while death and misunderstanding are around the corner.

Zeno, Monday, 15 December 2008 00:46 (fifteen years ago) link

part 4 is more of an endless,detached report about the endless women murders,with some inside stories, so it's the weakest of the parts in terms of literature (though it also has it's many moments of great prose to be sure), but it delivers the largest emotional impact upon the reader,digging deeper into THE theme of the novel - the horror ofdeath,forcing the reader to confront the subject in thoughts and emotion, turning back on his mind to the previous parts, trying to build the big picture, connect the parts to a whole.

and to think that Bolano himself was dying while writing the book , makes the impact more profound.

Zeno, Monday, 15 December 2008 01:21 (fifteen years ago) link

This is really a book written for undergraduate students. I just finished book one, and I can already imagine about 50 undergraduate paper topics waiting to be handed in.

The Role of Dreams
Morini as Outsider
Women in Academia
The Whore/Medusa Complex
The Eruption of Violence in Educated Academic Society
The Writer v. The Critic
Etc, etc.

I gotta say, I love it :) I chatted with a friend on AIM about the first 150 pages for like two hours last night.

Mordy, Monday, 22 December 2008 15:32 (fifteen years ago) link

after savage detectives, it's weird reading a bolano book with modern references (rap, robert rodriquez)

congratulations (n/a), Monday, 22 December 2008 15:47 (fifteen years ago) link

part 4 sort of teases with movie hero-type saviors (the loner cop who's teaching himself criminology, the FBI profiler, the obsessive reporter who starts getting tips), but you it's not that kind of story and it's not going to go down like that.

Tracy Michael Jordan Catalano (Jordan), Monday, 22 December 2008 15:48 (fifteen years ago) link

the fake robert rodriguez anecdote is great

Tracy Michael Jordan Catalano (Jordan), Monday, 22 December 2008 15:50 (fifteen years ago) link

xxpost that part in the first section where the academics watch the ring!

part 4 is more of an endless,detached report about the endless women murders,with some inside stories, so it's the weakest of the parts in terms of literature

i found part 4 incredible but also near impossible. the litany of dead women was hard to read but that was certainly the point, right?

i'm dreaming of a white xmas btw (Lamp), Monday, 22 December 2008 15:53 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, it becomes pretty numbing and i started to skim through those paragraphs, which has got to be the intended effect.

Tracy Michael Jordan Catalano (Jordan), Monday, 22 December 2008 15:56 (fifteen years ago) link

this book was fuckin rad

eman cipation s1ocklamation (max), Sunday, 28 December 2008 15:58 (fifteen years ago) link

srsly! co-sign

delicate mouse tune, crash of cat chords (Lamp), Sunday, 28 December 2008 17:53 (fifteen years ago) link

Was on holiday in Chile few weeks ago. Having drinks with some of my dad's friends, the ex-husband of one asked me if I had ever read Bolano. I said yes, I really like him and was currently reading 2666. Turns out he was best friends with him as boys. He had recently been sent interview questions about the young Bolano and his relationship with him. He said when he was young he was a storyteller, and all the boys in the crowd would crowd round him while he made up, on the spot, fantastical stories that they all really enjoyed. Also he told an anecdote about a time when he had shot a bird with a homemade slingshot, Bolano shouted at him, calling him a murderer, and then rung the bird's neck as it was still alive, but suffering.

what U cry 4 (jim), Sunday, 28 December 2008 18:11 (fifteen years ago) link

the character of Auxilio was based off of the story of Alcira Soust Scaffo, who really did remain hidden in a bathroom for 15 days during the military's occupation of the university.

https://i.imgur.com/Rhl2fl6.jpg

https://www.laizquierdadiario.com/Alcira-la-poeta-del-68-mexicano-entre-Roberto-Bolano-y-Jose-Revueltas

Karl Malone, Thursday, 5 July 2018 15:52 (five years ago) link

two years pass...

Distant Star is fuckin' great.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 April 2021 23:16 (two years ago) link

My favorite of his, so haunting and sad.

Been rereading Savage Detectives as well, now that I actually live in Mexico City it's so much fun recognizing all the places! Even the beginning has held up better than I thought, and how the second part gets more and more melancholy and mysterious as time moves on never fails to amaze me.

groovemaaan, Thursday, 29 April 2021 00:26 (two years ago) link

Had no idea I needed a novel about Roberto Bolaño, but holy shit, LAST WORDS ON EARTH by Javier Serena, translated by Katie Whittemore, coming from @open_letter this year is 🔥🔥🔥. Anyone who loves Bolaño or understands the uncompromising pursuit of literature will love this.

— Mark Haber (@markhaber713) April 28, 2021

Mark E. Smith died this year. Or, maybe last year. (bernard snowy), Thursday, 29 April 2021 13:12 (two years ago) link

After obsessing over this guy in my 30s, I honestly haven't thought much about him in a while. Mostly due to starting a family, but I also just burned out on him a bit. I should revisit one of his novellas. My favorite Bolano character type is the old friend/acquaintance who reappears in your life in an almost menacing way, now adrift and depressed, mumbling dark things to himself.

Heez, Thursday, 29 April 2021 15:30 (two years ago) link

has much in common with Sebald in that respect

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 April 2021 15:30 (two years ago) link

found out that a friend of mines parents are depicted in the savage detectives, in the first part of the book theyre part of the artistic milieu like a sculptor and... something, been a while since i read the book, and since he told me lol, not a close friend

lag∞n, Thursday, 29 April 2021 16:29 (two years ago) link

Influencers!

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 April 2021 16:30 (two years ago) link

lmao

lag∞n, Thursday, 29 April 2021 16:30 (two years ago) link

Is that the foul-mouthed American woman?

keto keto bonito v industry plant-based diet (PBKR), Thursday, 29 April 2021 16:37 (two years ago) link

yeah must be i know one of his parents is american

lag∞n, Thursday, 29 April 2021 17:28 (two years ago) link

nine months pass...

finishing up Distant Star rn, pretty good! I do like the concept of "how do you process it when someone in your little arts circle becomes a politically aligned psychotic murderer," because I am thinking of similar things now that I recently found out that someone I grew up with created a giant company that does new slavery or whatever.

for some reason this book is kinda reading like a musical to me, where things are happening in a semi-realistic way or whatever and then suddenly the plot takes off on these (kinda corny) flights of fancies and then comes down (like the skywriting poetry, or the the torture photography exhibit or w/e). Anyway, I tried to read him like 10-15 years ago and thought he was pretty overrated, couldn't get through anything, now I'm having a good time reading this book, not sure why. 10-15 years ago I was able to dive into Marias and Sebald and other more "it helps to be divorced to get it" authors, but whatever it's nice to have something to be into now.

Bongo Jongus, Sunday, 6 February 2022 20:20 (two years ago) link


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