Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
The landmark first story collection from internationally acclaimed author Alejandro Zambra, "burning brighter than most anything we'd call exceptional, yesterday or today and in any language" (NPR)--now reissued by Penguin with five new stories An early desktop computer becomes the third partner in a doomed relationship, and a receptacle for hundreds of files of music, images, and writing of questionable quality. A man attempts to quit smoking in spite of the fact that he's very good at it. Pinochet's dictatorship looms large over classroom instruction, and men in relationships--cruel, tender, brutal, sympathetic--exhibit their profound capacity for both love and harm.
Every facet of Chilean life, from religion and romance to technology, soccer, and solitude, becomes fresh and uncannily captivating in this unforgettable book of short fiction from internationally acclaimed author Alejandro Zambra. Intimate and playful, provocative and profound, and brilliantly rendered by National Book Award-winning translator Megan McDowell, My Documents a testament to the necessity of literature even--and especially--in times of political and personal crisis.
Synopsis
The landmark first story collection from internationally acclaimed author Alejandro Zambra, now featuring five additional stories and an introduction by his longtime collaborator, Megan McDowell An early desktop computer becomes the third partner in a doomed relationship; an older brother figure whose father lives in exile imparts hilarious life lessons to his young prot g . A man attempts to quit smoking despite the fact that he's very good at it; another masquerades as the family man he'll never be. Throughout, Pinochet's dictatorship casts a long shadow, and men in relationships exhibit their profound capacity for both love and harm.
In these unforgettable stories--which span religion, romance, technology, soccer, solitude, and more--Alejandro Zambra unfolds a radical literary reflection on life, relationships, and the tender and brutal dimensions of masculinity in Chile from the 1980s to the present. Intimate and playful, provocative and profound, and brilliantly rendered by National Book Award winning translator Megan McDowell, My Documents a testament to the necessity of literature even--and especially--in times of political and personal crisis.