Roberto Bolano's "The Savage Detectives" discussion

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The Savage Detectives
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You accepted, of course. There was no initiation ceremony. It was better that way.
Or should we change that?
Or should we change that?
OK, when I start a new high exertion book, I like to break it down.
So here's an overview:
I: Mexicans Lost in Mexico [1975]
Pages 1 - 139
No chapters. Written in diary format, so broken up into daily entries.
II: The Savage Detectives [1976 - 1996]
Pages 140 - 588
26 chapters. Average length: 17 pages.
Fuck, this is gonna be a breeze ;)
III: The Sonora Desert [1976]
Pages 589 - 648
Same writing style as Part I. Short.
So here's an overview:
I: Mexicans Lost in Mexico [1975]
Pages 1 - 139
No chapters. Written in diary format, so broken up into daily entries.
II: The Savage Detectives [1976 - 1996]
Pages 140 - 588
26 chapters. Average length: 17 pages.
Fuck, this is gonna be a breeze ;)
III: The Sonora Desert [1976]
Pages 589 - 648
Same writing style as Part I. Short.

Or should we change that?"
methinks the initiation part will be getting through the first 50 pages :->
thank God I have already read it once.

Oh well, apparently the middle part of the book is very different, but i'll wait before i venture any further, until i seem to have more company venturing there with me.


I was just testing the waters. I wanted to see what the book was like, and since the prose wasn't very dense, it seemed silly to stop before i got to some kind of... landmark.
Waiting there patiently with engine switched off and busy with 4 other books at the same time.
Maybe i needed something to help me stop feeling so miserable that Gravity's R just isn't moving for me.. Half the time i feel like i'm missing about a million references and allusions with GR, whereas with SD, at least it's only the LA poets that i seem to be a complete ignoramus about. :P :(
Don't worry, this is fast reading.

Oh! Ok... but now you've found me out regarding Gravity... boo-hoo. I must admit that so far i've been finding this an easier read.
I'd love to chat, but how are we going to do things to avoid spoilers for those that are not with us yet? Separate threads for separate sections perhaps? Ian?


well thats just it.I looked up a lot of these folks. Some of them are real,and very worthwhile to discover) but some are not listed anywhere,or are somewhat off the wall, like a spanish diaper service, I believe (my Spanish is inadaquate) with those annoying jiggling graphics.

Yes, i looked up a bunch, some from the links provided elsewhere in this group's discussion threads, but the problem is that if you're not familiar with these guy's actual work, for which i imagine Spanish would be a recommendation, all the allusions to their actual poems and literature is just completely over my head.
At least there's a story going on separately to the literary allusions, so i guess i'm just focusing on that for now.


The style here tends to be more stream of consciousness than fluffy and wordy, so i hope you enjoy this more. :)
Personally, i love the magical realist style in which a lot of the LA's write.


Have you tried out Isabel Allende yet? Hmm, or perhaps not, if you don't like that kind of thing.
Perhaps one of GG Marquez's shorter works might also be more accessible than his longer works.
Personally i have an extremely soft spot for his Chronicle of a Death Foretold, but i know it doesn't fall within everybody's tastes. However, given that you don't like the more fluffy stuff, maybe that one will be a good entry point, actually.
It's not very fluffy, and it only gets emotional at the end, but really only at the end did the style seem quite florid, which to me was fitting and a perfect contrapoint for the exquisite self-restraint earlier on in the novella.
I like his short stories too, but then i am a lover of short stories. :P

I put Chronicle of a Death Foretold on my to-read shelf. No page goes unturned in the quest to become a better writer.

The intro to SD implies RB set himself apart from Marquez etc.

I think it would be quite an interesting study in stylistic choices from a writer's POV.
It's postmodern in construction. It has some elements of MR, but through most of the novel it tends to be more restrained than most MR, whereas more florid and visceral aspects start to break through towards the end of the novel. But it is the dry tone that is adopted earlier on, which makes the visceral ending flare up in contrast like the final passionate flourish in a Flamenco dance.
Like i mentioned in my review, it has the artifice of being a journalistic investigation, but i suspect it was a quest for emotional closure on GGM's part.
To me it had echoes of how Kurt Vonnegut tried to deal with his PSTD regarding Dresden in Slaughterhouse 5; though the 2 authors did deal with it differently. (Perhaps differences in temperament?)
With the GGM novella, anger shows through, anger and grief, whereas, to me in Slaughterhouse 5, it's just that typical 'dead' kind of denial;- the shying away from emotion that one often sees in traumatized persons.

I think it would be quite an interesting..."
That's an interesting contrast/comparison between Marquez and Vonnegut. Culture/temperament's impact on POV choices is a two-edged sword as it can repeal or attract readers.
I've lived with several cultures, which created a desire to write diverse characters from a perspective outside my own personality makeup--knowing that that goal is essentially impossible. Resonance with one's temperament comes through whether reading or writing, yet reading from diverse POVs can expand our own experience and encourage tolerance and understanding of how others operate in life. Still, there are attractions to types and styles, which sometimes feel like limitations--all the more reason to explore (and retry) numerous authors.

and in so doing expand our own range of thought.
When I first started reading SD,I was seduced into imagining an affinity with the impulse driving the characters. Gradually I had to admit that I was bewildered by many of the actions that seemed contradictary to a shared vision.
It may have been 3 times during the reading of this book that I flipped my opinion, ending up where I started, loving it savagely.

And I found this very appropriate quote regarding writing from various POV's
To feel what it means to be another person. To be able to touch, if only for a moment, the blaze that burns within another human being.”
― David Grossman
Now that you've been cordially invited to join the visceral realists...