Kozba’s Reviews > 2666 > Status Update
Kozba
is on page 80 of 1128
Outspoken thoughts: Liz Norton is an embodiment of how we can love people that we despise, no matter how much we tried to break free. Her ménage à trois with Pelletier and Espinoza is a sex-charged self destruction that attempts to drown out the self-loathing that stems from still loving her abusive and idiotic ex-husband.
— Jun 10, 2026 08:32AM
Like flag
Kozba’s Previous Updates
Kozba
is on page 351 of 1128
The part about Fate: A fever dream sequence of an African American journalist who's asked by his editor to go cover a boxing match in Santa Teresa, and instead, becomes more interested in the on going case of female killings around the city.
We're almost halfway through the book. The writing is good, but it can border on pretentiousness, a flaw only amplified by the one dimensional characters we've met so far.
— 1 hour, 16 min ago
We're almost halfway through the book. The writing is good, but it can border on pretentiousness, a flaw only amplified by the one dimensional characters we've met so far.
Kozba
is on page 228 of 1128
Amalfitano's part.
A Chilean professor who was abandoned by his Spanish wife in pursuit of some poet in Spain, and who's destined to die later of AIDS, is stuck in our crime setting of Santa Teresa, Mexico, along with his 17 years old daughter, Rosa.
Between abandonment and his growing terror for his daughter's safety amid the city's relentless femicides, Amalfitano is slowly descending into schizophrenia.
— Jun 13, 2026 11:17AM
A Chilean professor who was abandoned by his Spanish wife in pursuit of some poet in Spain, and who's destined to die later of AIDS, is stuck in our crime setting of Santa Teresa, Mexico, along with his 17 years old daughter, Rosa.
Between abandonment and his growing terror for his daughter's safety amid the city's relentless femicides, Amalfitano is slowly descending into schizophrenia.
Kozba
is on page 159 of 1128
Am not sure if we're done with the critics for good. We've finally arrived to our somber setting in Santa Teresa, Mexico.
And one of our European protagonists, as colonialists of old, is sexually feeding off on the innocence of a native girl, in compensation of a romantic blow he's just received.
What is it with this European fascination to sexually conquer the girls of the destitute world?
— Jun 12, 2026 02:49AM
And one of our European protagonists, as colonialists of old, is sexually feeding off on the innocence of a native girl, in compensation of a romantic blow he's just received.
What is it with this European fascination to sexually conquer the girls of the destitute world?

