3.5 

The Savage Detectives

By Roberto Bolaño & Natasha Wimmer
The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño & Natasha Wimmer digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

The Savage Detectives is an exuberant, raunchy, wildly inventive, and ambitious novel from one of the greatest Latin American authors of our age.

National Bestseller

New Year's Eve, 1975: Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima, founders of the visceral realist movement in poetry, leave Mexico City in a borrowed white Impala. Their quest: to track down the obscure, vanished poet Cesárea Tinajero. A violent showdown in the Sonora desert turns search to flight; twenty years later Belano and Lima are still on the run.

The explosive first long work by "the most exciting writer to come from south of the Rio Grande in a long time" (Ilan Stavans, Los Angeles Times), The Savage Detectives follows Belano and Lima through the eyes of the people whose paths they cross in Central America, Europe, Israel, and West Africa. This chorus includes the muses of visceral realism, the beautiful Font sisters; their father, an architect interned in a Mexico City asylum; a sensitive young follower of Octavio Paz; a foul-mouthed American graduate student; a French girl with a taste for the Marquis de Sade; the great-granddaughter of Leon Trotsky; a Chilean stowaway with a mystical gift for numbers; the anorexic heiress to a Mexican underwear empire; an Argentinian photojournalist in Angola; and assorted hangers-on, detractors, critics, lovers, employers, vagabonds, real-life literary figures, and random acquaintances.

A polymathic descendant of Borges and Pynchon, Roberto Bolaño traces the hidden connection between literature and violence in a world where national boundaries are fluid and death lurks in the shadow of the avant-garde. The Savage Detectives is a dazzling original, the first great Latin American novel of the twenty-first century.

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The Savage Detectives Reviews

3.5
“I already know this is a book I’ll return to throughout my life. Bolaño is a master architect. Every novel I’ve read of his contains a hidden structure that only becomes visible once everything is said and done. I knew this going in, so I tried to pay close attention to details that might seem incidental on first encounter. Almost nothing in his books is wasted. Every element contributes either to the story’s development or to an idea his characters are working through. Sometimes a detail quietly becomes a metaphor for the whole, a beautiful ornament that foreshadows what’s coming or crystallizes a belief the novel has been circling. That’s what makes it feel architectural. You’re always looking at either a pillar holding the whole thing up or an ornament showing you the inside from the outside.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ I spent two days just sitting with it, backtracking, fitting the pieces together and I’m still getting moments where something clicks and I have to stop. Not the plot. The meaning underneath it all. And I know these moments will keep coming, weeks or months from now, until I finally work up the courage to pick it up again.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ A beautiful, intoxicating book that pulls you in from the first chapter. There are stretches you have to muscle through, but the novel repays every bit of that effort and keeps repaying it long after you’ve turned the last page.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​”
“Challenging, but extremely rewarding. Lots to think about the beauty and absurdity of art, and of those who dedicate their lives to it in pursuit of meaning. The shifting perspectives and time jumps took a bit of getting used to, but in the end it felt like a necessary device rather than a gimmick. Truly a miracle that a book like this exists.”
Loudly Crying Face“The blurb on the back says this is an inventive and ambitious novel. Dear readers, it is not. It is a loquacious rambling of absolutely nothing, mostly by characters that have no substance, about other characters who are incredibly boring. I will look back on this novel as an example of bad decision making on my part.”

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