› a&eletters@sfbg.com
REVIEW In the English-speaking press, Roberto Bolaño is widely touted as the hottest novelist to come out of Latin America since Gabriel García Márquez. There are no levitating virgins in the work of Bolaño; he depicts instead a more recognizable if still defamiliarized Western Hemisphere, full of intellectuals, tragic activists, poets, queers, prostitutes, and drug dealers. And Nazis.
Although Bolaño died in 2003, his death hasn't slowed the rise of his reputation; he is posthumously leading the revolt of a generation of writers and readers who were crushed under the weight of Latin America's major literary exports, the Boom writers. Bolaño's idiosyncratic style isn't magical realist or sentimental about folk traditions, but he isn't exactly a realist either. Nazi Literature in the Americas (New Directions, 280 pages, $23.95), newly translated into English by Chris Andrews, follows the path of Jorge Luis Borges.
Also from this author
"Amish Abstractions" ponders whether the "simple" life is different from the life of (Bridget) Riley
THE DRUG ISSUE: 12 hallucinogenic novels and 8 inebriated memory pieces
Terror's Advocate adds to Barbet Schroeder's library of alluring evil
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- You have a lot of leverage with supes up for re-election - May 23, 2012
- SF Ocean Edge, - May 23, 2012
- I can enjoy GG Pk without a million lbs of toxic tire particles - May 23, 2012
- "We need 6 supes..." The way - May 23, 2012
- Well you would know, wouldn't - May 23, 2012
- Good editorial against plastic turf project in Richmond Review - May 23, 2012
- Judith is right - May 23, 2012
- You're misspelling "Lucretia" - May 23, 2012
- San Diego Park & Rec: plastic fields cost 50% more than grass - May 23, 2012
- Must-see youtube video about dangers of plastic turf fields - May 23, 2012










