The Savage Detectives: A Novel
by Roberto Bolaño
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recommends it for: probably the young, and definitely the formerly young; people who like to read
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Jessica by:
a few of my favorite bookstersrecommends it for: probably the young, and definitely the formerly young; people who like to read
I'll bet a lot of us walk around with some real concrete ideas about just who it is we could possibly fall in love with. Maybe the specifics of our ideas change over time and even become less rigid, but still we maintain that we know on some level what it is that we want. Maybe when we're nineteen, we're convinced we could only ever truly love a man with a neck tattoo who sings lead in an Oi! band and has great feminist politics and knows how to cook. Or maybe our criteria are purely negative, a...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Jason by:
the internetzrecommends it for: Mexicans, Chileans, Argentinians, Americans, adventurers
The Savage Detectives is a glorious book, albeit a bit long, about a group of beat-like poets in and out of Mexico City tramping along and living life as Bohemian renegade assholes with a penchant for discovery and genius. The book centers around the last two remaining members of a literary generation called the Visceral Realists, who have purged every other member in their group but themselves. Then, because of an altercation these boys are forced to leave the country. Then, 500 pages is dev...more
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Read in April, 2008
bolano sets a tone that i can't help but love...if you find yourself reading about a poetry workshop that threatens to degenerate into a fist fight you know you reading the right book...
sydney bechet would stab a dude if he played the wrong chords...Art should be taken seriously....
the first section mystified me until i was well into it...
i think the obvious influence here could be the beats, but for some reason i think bolano would dislike this connection...
but there can be no doubt t...more
sydney bechet would stab a dude if he played the wrong chords...Art should be taken seriously....
the first section mystified me until i was well into it...
i think the obvious influence here could be the beats, but for some reason i think bolano would dislike this connection...
but there can be no doubt t...more
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Read in April, 2008
Poets chasing poets chasing poets seem to be the real momentum behind Roberto Bolano’s The Savage Detectives. This sprawling, often opaque novel is book-ended by the journals of seventeen-year-old Juan Garcia Madero, a Mexico City youth who is tempted away from his chaste college existence by the unruly antics of the newly-formed ‘Visceral Realists,’ a poetry collective of unkempt youths who enthusiastically quote French poets, steal books, and plot the overthrow of Octavio Paz--but...more
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I wish there was a proper way to splutter in written form. I mean, it's not that I didn't like this book, really. I certainly didn't not like it. I just... just... I dunno, I guess I just didn't get it like everyone else seems to've. As I said somewhere else, given that everyone really lost their shit over this book (I mean, did you see brian's review? Or Andrew's? Or fr...more
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Read in July, 2008
I'm writing this, sadly, not while sitting atop floatwood scribbling into the salty breeze of some nameless sea, but rather staring into my computer screen at a metrosexual Budapest café with expensive lamps and wi-fi. It's exactly the type of café that Roberto Bolaño pleaded his fellow poets to abandon in the 1976 infrarrealist manifesto "Leave it all behind once again, throw yourselves to the roads."...more
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This is a long and difficult but thoroughly absorbing novel about a group of literary insurgents in Mexico City in the 1970’s—the visceral realists—and what becomes of its two guiding spirits—Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima--over the next 20 years. The first and final sections of the book are narrated by young poet Juan Garcia Madero. Madero accompanies Lima and Belano on a journey through Mexico City’s many undergrounds: literary, criminal, and otherwise. The visceral realists are youn...more
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Read in November, 2007
i just finished the first section... what a book! this is the hottest book i've read in a long time. very very sexy. whatever your orientation, i think this book would steam you up... to be a young thing around town! ...and the writing is so natural... he makes it seem so easy. so far it reminds in a way of frederick ted castle's ANTICIPATION, not too similar except that fast fast momentum of being young and everything happening at once, the gush to speak. the immediately-recognizable genius *an...more
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Read in March, 2008
A good way to explain how I feel about this book is to say that as much as I liked it, I'd be reluctant to recommend it to most people. I give it four stars because though it was a very "postmodern" and "experimental" novel, it was a rare example of a time when both of those adjectives aren't synonymous with "pretentious".
The book is about the experiences of a group of young poets in 1970s Mexico City. The narrative is broken into three main sections. The...more
The book is about the experiences of a group of young poets in 1970s Mexico City. The narrative is broken into three main sections. The...more
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Read in April, 2008
Roberto Bolano's The Savage Detectives is the type of book that gets better after you finish it. It is an artistic statement, best appreciated as a whole. You have to commit yourself to either the whole thing, or nothing, and it's not for everyone:
There is little plot, the characters are thin, the narrative style is odd, and there are several pornographic scenes early on. The 400 page middle section can become tedious at times. I checked this book out of the library, and on the &q...more
There is little plot, the characters are thin, the narrative style is odd, and there are several pornographic scenes early on. The 400 page middle section can become tedious at times. I checked this book out of the library, and on the &q...more
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Read in April, 2007
Easily the year's most acclaimed literary sensation, Roberto Bolaño's fame is enjoying a remarkably unprecedented ascendancy. The Chilean novelist and poet, whose exaltation has long been celebrated throughout the Spanish-speaking world, is posthumously sweeping the English-speaking countries (he died in 2003). Semana, a Colombian weekly magazine, recently published a list of the 100 best Spanish-language novels of the past twenty-five years, which, not surprisingly, included three works by...more
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Read in April, 2008
Where to begin?
The Savage Detectives is one of those titles I couldn't seem to avoid. When it was originally released in 1998 it won a slew of awards I had never heard of, and upon the release of its 2007 English language translation it was met with a loads of new praise. The New York Times named it one of the Ten Best Books of 2007, it was featured in the Morning News's Tournament of Books, and the dust cover is littered with glowing reviews from at least ten critics, calling it "brill...more
The Savage Detectives is one of those titles I couldn't seem to avoid. When it was originally released in 1998 it won a slew of awards I had never heard of, and upon the release of its 2007 English language translation it was met with a loads of new praise. The New York Times named it one of the Ten Best Books of 2007, it was featured in the Morning News's Tournament of Books, and the dust cover is littered with glowing reviews from at least ten critics, calling it "brill...more





















