The Insufferable Gaucho Explained

The Insufferable Gaucho
Title Orig:El Gaucho Insufrible
Translator:Chris Andrews
Author:Roberto Bolaño
Country:Chile
Language:Spanish
Publisher:Anagrama (Spanish)
New Directions (English)
Pub Date:2003
English Pub Date:2010
Media Type:Print (paperback)
Pages:177
Isbn:8433968505

The Insufferable Gaucho (El Gaucho Insufrible, 2003) is a collection of five short stories and two essays by the Chilean author Roberto Bolaño (1953–2003). It was published in English in 2010, translated by Chris Andrews. During his lifetime, Bolaño made his name as a writer of short stories, and The Insufferable Gaucho collects a disparate variety of work.[1] From its comical title story to the Kafkaesque "Police Rat", the book's wide spectrum of storytelling techniques "makes an ideal introduction to the Bolaño imaginaire."[1] The year after its publication, Bolaño was posthumously awarded in Chile for this work with the Altazor Prize in the "Narrative" category.[2]

Contents

External links

Notes and References

  1. Stein . Lorin . Lorin Stein . December 2010 . New Books: The Insufferable Gaucho . Harper's . Harper's Magazine Foundation . 321 . 1,927 . 76 . 2011-01-22 .
  2. Web site: 2012-09-20 . » Roberto Bolaño Altazor – Premio a las Artes Nacionales . 2023-06-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120920023101/http://www.premioaltazor.cl/roberto-bolano-el-gaucho-insufrible/ . 2012-09-20 .