Rating: Not rated
Tags: Literary Collections, Essays, Lang:en
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Added: July 12, 2018
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
The essays of Roberto Bolano in English at last. Between
Parentheses collects most of the newspaper columns and
articles Bolano wrote during the last five years of his life,
as well as the texts of some of his speeches and talks and a
few scattered prologues. “Taken together,” as the
editor Ignacio Echevarría remarks in his introduction,
they provide “a personal cartography of the writer: the
closest thing, among all his writings, to a kind of
fragmented ‘autobiography.’” Bolano’s
career as a nonfiction writer began in 1998, the year he
became famous overnight for The Savage Detectives; he was
suddenly in demand for articles and speeches, and he took to
this new vocation like a duck to water. Cantankerous,
irreverent, and insufferably opinionated, Bolano also could
be tender (about his family and favorite places) as well as a
fierce advocate for his heroes (Borges, Cortázar, Parra)
and his favorite contemporaries, whose books he read
assiduously and promoted generously. A demanding critic, he
declares that in his “ideal literary kitchen there
lives a warrior”: he argues for courage, and especially
for bravery in the face of failure. Between Parentheses fully
lives up to his own demands: “I ask for creativity from
literary criticism, creativity at all levels.”