ISBN 1-931010-05-6
128 pp. | paper only
$12.00
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a
novel by Matías Montes-Huidobro (in Spanish)
Concierto
para sordos
is an unconventional work that expands narrative space and point
of view to unaccustomed limits. The novel is concerned with the
metaphysics of action that strikingly begins when the narrator is
garroted. Within an undefined black room, he watches himself making
an anguished journey down a dead-end street, each step taking him
into ever greater danger. The narrative evokes a dance of death
against the backdrop of the monumental necropolis of Havana, the
Cementerio de Colón, where much of the action takes place.
In this environment a concert for the deaf is played out, a symphony
that only the chosen can hear. The reader is taken from the indigenous
and colonial past of Cuba through its Afro-Cuban components to a
confrontation with contemporary history. The protagonist suffers
a genuinely Cuban version of the Kafkian paradox; he is pursued
by a monstrous and omnipresent creature that represents both the
individual and the collective being, and only through the creative
process can he attain freedom.
Matías
Montes-Huidobro,
author of several previous novels, was born in Cuba and with his
family became an exile in November 1961. He has taught at the University
of Hawaii, from which he retired as emeritus professor in 1997,
the University of Pittsburgh, Swarthmore College, and Arizona State
University. A prolific novelist, dramatist, and poet, Montes-Huidobro
has been nominated for numerous awards in Cuba, Mexico, Colombia,
Spain, and the United States; most recently he won the Premio Café
Gijón in Spain. His shorter works have appeared in literary
journals and anthologies. His novel Desterrados al fuego
was published by Plover Press with the title Qwert and the Wedding
Gown.
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