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3.0 

Woes of the True Policeman

By Roberto Bolaño & Natasha Wimmer
Woes of the True Policeman by Roberto Bolaño & Natasha Wimmer digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Begun in the 1980s and worked on until the author's death in 2003, Woes of the True Policeman is Roberto Bolaño's last, unfinished novel.

The novel follows Óscar Amalfitano—an exiled Chilean university professor and widower—through the maze of his revolutionary past, his relationship with his teenage daughter, Rosa, his passion for a former student, and his retreat from scandal in Barcelona.

Forced to leave Barcelona for Santa Teresa, a Mexican city close to the U.S. border where women are being killed in unprecedented numbers, Amalfitano soon begins an affair with Castillo, a young forger of Larry Rivers paintings. Meanwhile, Rosa, Amalfitano's daughter, engages in her own epistolary romance with a basketball player from Barcelona, while still trying to cope with her mother's early death and her father's secrets. After finding Castillo in bed with her father, Rosa is forced to confront her own crisis. What follows is an intimate police investigation of Amalfitano that involves a series of dark twists, culminating in a finale full of euphoria and heartbreak.
Featuring characters and stories from his other books, Woes of the True Policeman invites the reader more than ever into the world of Roberto Bolaño. It is an exciting, kaleidoscopic novel, lyrical and intense, yet darkly humorous. Exploring the roots of memory and the limits of art, Woes of the True Policeman marks the culmination of one of the great careers of world literature.

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22 Reviews

3.0
Expressionless Face“Since the start it was harsh! Kind an of judgmental by giving labels to other artists. Almafitano’s story was good if it wasn’t interrupted by all the other stories in every other chapter. Also a lot of it read as a review of someone’s else’s work. He makes a lot of critiques on other authors and poets a lot of them I haven’t heard before so I’m not sure if some of them are real or fictional characters for the story. The narrative is divided into five sections, with the first being the most structured, introducing Amalfitano and the plot’s foundation. The subsequent sections are more diffuse, touching on themes of literary validation, personal transformation, and the pursuit of art. I don’t recommend reading this”
“"I cried, he said, like someone who finds true religion and sees it for what it is and knows that his salvation lies in it, but carries on regardless"”

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