Yesterday
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- $ 42.900,00
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- $ 42.900,00
Descripción editorial
In San Agustín de Tango, you can never be sure what's waiting around the corner.
Over the course of a single day – the day before today – the hero of this novel and his adored wife embark on a journey through the absurd and the surreal, encountering a choir of monkeys and a carnivorous ostrich, travelling from the studio of an artist obsessed with the colour green to the waistcoat pocket of a pot-bellied man.
All the while, the tolling of the bell in the city square pushes their whirlwind adventure towards its fateful conclusion…
A brilliant and bizarre work from an overlooked great of 20th century Chilean literature, in English translation for the first time and with a new introduction by Alejandro Zambra.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Emar (the pen name of Chilean art critic Álvaro Yáñez Bianchi, 1893-1964) makes his English-language debut with a lucid and absurdist story of a single day. It begins with a man's public execution, apparently for the crime of telling people about the carnal pleasures he shared with his wife. The beheading is witnessed by the seemingly dispassionate first-person narrator and his own wife. Emar's elegant prose, precisely translated by McDowell, places intense focus on the minutiae of the day, such as the details of the couple's meal and sightseeing in San Agustin de Tango, Chile. In a museum, the narrator observes a painter's use of innumerable shades of green ("The green of silence, the green of murmurings, the green of pandemonium"). Ultimately, the narrator's thoughts of death, which he's kept to himself ever since the drop of the guillotine, lead to a shocking and illuminating request of his wife. An introduction by Alejandro Zambra notes how Emar's interest in the European avant-garde contrasted with Latin American literature's prevailing realism, thus accounting for his lack of recognition. (Emar also posthumously published a massive Proustian novel called Umbral, which is still only available in Spanish.) This arresting story is a great place to start, and it will leave readers wanting to see more of the author's odd obsessions.