Synopses & Reviews
The Algarrobos Quartet is a series of four short, enigmatic novels set on the northern pampas of Argentina. In the town of Algarrobos, the rules of the game are mysterious, and terrible events occur without warning. Unexpected deaths remain unexplained. Soldiers attack innocent workers. Pampered doves die brutally as well, and a Biblical flood threatens to wash everything away. Most people in Algarrobos don't know why these things happen, and they don't want to know.
Puzzles and multiple meanings abound in Goloboff's writing. A central character is known as El Negro though he isn't black. In three of these Argentine Jewish novels only a few characters identify themselves as Jews. There are assimilated Jews, an old, broken-down Jewish cemetery, and some stories of the Jewish past. The fourth novel deals with Italian-Argentine anarchists.
These novels are a transmutation of reality, a veil, a facade. Goloboff's prose takes on multiple meanings, and the translation masterfully captures his use of language to evoke enigmas that challenge us to understand both the stories and how chaos and the unexpected engulf us all.
Synopsis
A series of four short novels from Argentina in which the rules of the game are mysterious and terrible events occur without warning.
About the Author
Gerardo Mario Goloboff was born in 1939 in Carlos Casares, Argentina, one of the original agricultural settlements established by the Jewish Colonization Association in the late nineteenth centry. Trained as a lawyer, he devoted himself to literature, founding the literary journal Nuevos Aires. Goloboff spent many years in political exile in France where he taught literary theory and Latin American literature at the Universities of Toulouse and Paris-Nanterre. He is the author of five novels and several books of poetry. He now lives and writes in Argentina. Stephen A. Sadow teaches in the Department of Modern Languages at Northeastern University.
Table of Contents
Dove keeper -- The setting moon -- The seer -- The commune.