2666

2666

2666

The figure of Von Archimboldi, an enigmatic German writer, is the secret thread that sews one to each other of the five "parts" that compose 2666, without doubt, Roberto Bolaño’s masterpiece. 2666 is the date of the remote perspective in which we must arrange the impre-ssive tangle of destinies, characters, generic and plot lines, a wide constellation marked by the sign of loss and oblivion, of insignificance, of useless excess, of mistake and misunderstanding. From the ruins of Europe, travelling dizzily, to the Sonora desert, where there an endless sequence of killings of women has been happening, the novel conveys us on an abysmal journey, muffled among laughter, by a culture and a civilization in defeat, in which literature continues to invoke the simulacrum of a redemption.

 

Rights for the following countries are managed by Anagrama:

Germany, Brazil, Canada (french), France, Greece, The Netherlands, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia

for other countries, please, contact Carmen Balcells Agency.

 

TRANSLATION RIGHTS SALES

  • USA (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
  • UK (Picador)
  • Italy (Adelphi)
  • Germany (Hanser)
  • The Netherlands (Meulenhoff)
  • France (Christian Bourgois)
  • Brazil (Companhia das Letras)
  • Russia (Ripol)
 
Roberto Bolaño

Roberto Bolaño

This author is no longer represented by Anagrama.

Roberto Bolaño was born on April 28, 1953, in Santiago, Chile .For most of
his youth Bolaño was a nomad, living at one time or another in Chile,
Mexico, El Salvador, France and Spain, where he finally settled down in the
early eighties in the small catalan beachtown of Blanes. He died in
Barcelona in 2003 of a liver disorder he suffered from for more than a
decade.

He was awarded several prizes, among them, the Municipal Prize for Literature Santiago de Chile - the country's most prestigious literary prize - for Llamadas telefonicas in 1998.In the same year he was also awarded the Herralde Prize for Los detectives salvajes, which in 1999 also achieved the Rómulo Gallegos Prize, the most coveted award for fiction in Latin America. Nocturno de Chile was selected by the Los Angeles Times Book Review as one of The Ten Best Books of 2003. His last book, 2666, has been elected the best book of 2004 by the main Spanish and Latin American cultural supplements and newspapers and awarded, posthumous, with the Ciudad de Barcelona Prize, the Salambó Award, awarded by Spanish writers, the Altazor Award, awarded by Chilean writers, and the Municipal Prize for Literature Santiago de Chile.


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