Reader Score
76%
76% of readers
recommend this book
"An enthralling and haunting ode to youth, life on the margins, poetry and poets, and Mexico City." --Francisco Goldman
Auxilio Lacouture is the mother of Mexican poetry. Uruguayan by birth, Mexican by destiny, the vagrant poetess serves as guardian, confidant, literary mentor, and occasional lover to a generation of Mexico City's mad young poets, a fixture in their heady bohemian swirl. On the infamous day in 1968 when the military invades the campus of the city's main university, Auxilio is in the women's bathroom of the department of literature and philosophy, reading the poetry of Pedro Garfias on the toilet. Trapped and alone, she hides there for twelve days, her life's story, past and future, pouring from her in a great deluge. Hallucinatory and prophetic, Roberto Bolaño's Amulet is a haunting, spellbinding meditation on violence and exile, on memory and history--a requiem for a lost generation.
Catalogued as high modernist for expediency’s sake. AMERICAN ABDUCTIONS (@dalkey_archive) APHASIA (@fsgbooks) REVOLUTIONARIES TRY AGAIN (@Coffee_House_).
Happy birthday Roberto Bolaño if only you would have been here to impugn my ranking of your wonderful fictions 1) By Night in Chile 2) The middle chapter of Savage Detectives 3) Amulet 4) 2666 5) Distant Star https://t.co/FHvEX2fwQY