Way Far Away
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- £5.49
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- £5.49
Publisher Description
A short, unforgettable masterwork by one of Colombia’s most influential living novelists.
Far Far Away is the Colombian master Evelio Rosero’s ninth novel and has been billed by his Spanish publisher as “one of the most important Colombian works of fiction written in the past two decades.” In search of his missing granddaughter Rosaura, an old man named Jeremías Andrade arrives in a town strewn with dead mice and overflowing with mist and fog. The owner of a rotten hotel and the dwarf who always accompanies her; children who play with sinister soccer balls and observe life from the ruined rooftops; an albino named Bonifacio who appears and disappears like a ghost; the cart driver whose only task is to pick up the mice piling up night after night; the charitable nuns in a nearby convent — these are the characters that converge in a vigil turned nightmare. Jeremías’s wanderings reveal a haunting truth, and a possibility of reunion in a place where all is lost, a forever-gaping abyss.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Rosero follows up Toño the Infallible with a potent fever dream about an old man named Jeremías Andrade whose yearslong search for his missing granddaughter, Rosaura, takes him to a strange town in the Andes. The locale is ominous: the atmosphere is blanketed by mist and the streets are strewn with fossilized mice that crunch when Jeremías walks down the street. The residents of the sparsely populated town utter warnings: the landlady at the hotel where Jeremías stays tells him to "beware of the nightmares"; a man sleeping on the steps of the church tells him "it's best to turn back"; and a blind woman explains that the mice "come from every corner of the globe to die here." Jeremías's quest culminates in a nightmarish descent into the "faraway place," where he's been told his granddaughter might be found. Rosero sidesteps straightforward answers and resolution in favor of uneasy vibes. The story's most memorable quality is how effectively he renders Jeremías's solitude and desperation: "all these years, he thought, Rosaura had been the only thing separating him from death." This novella packs a powerful punch.