Reviews in Translation
This post is courtesy of judge, Scott Esposito. Scott Esposito blogs at and .
So here are some things that Iāve reviewed, will review, or will do something with in some way at some point that I think are strong contenders for the 2013 .
First up: The Ingenious Gentleman and Poet Federico GarcĆa Lorca Ascends to Hell by Carlos Rojas. Yep, thatās the title, and itās a damn good book. Itās very hard to summarize what this book doesāor how it does itāso Iām going to encourage you to just . Suffice to say, I like fiction that appropriates historical characters and/or incidents in interesting ways, and thatās just what Rojas does here.
Hypothermia by Ćlvaro Enrigue. I have a review of this one in this weekās Times Literary Supplement. Enrigue was someone whom I first discovered in Dalkey Archiveās Best of Contemporary Mexican Fiction. His āOn the Death of the Authorā was the best thing in the book (which, Iām pretty sure, ). Hypothermia was the book from which it came, and Iāve been eager to read it ever since. Well, now I have, and itās a very strong book.
Seiobo There Below by Laszlo Krasznahorkai. Iāll have a review of this publishing soon. Itās my frontrunner at the moment for the BTBA. Thatās kind of a bold thing to say since we gave Krasznahorkai the award last year, but, god damn, this book is incredible. Itās not fair. Maybe we should ban him for a few years if he takes the award two years running.
The End of Love by Marcos Giralt Torrente. I first found out about this book when Ethan Nosowsky of McSweeneyās Press (and now back to Graywolf) asked me to write a report on it. I recommended it without reservation, and itās one of the best books Iāve ever reported on. These four long stories (or maybe theyāre novellas) have a little of a Javier MarĆas thing going, a little Joseph Conrad, a little Henry James. Theyāre remarkable. On Oct 22 Iām going to be discussing just how great they are with their translator, the incredible Katie Silver in San Francisco.

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