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Distant Relations

Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden

Collection Lannan Selections

Paperback
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Distant Relations begins in the elegant Automobile Club de France as an elderly Count tells a story to the unnamed narrator. But the book does not remain here in the café, nor even in France. Instead, as the Count speaks, the story moves across time and space, from Latin America to Europe, from generation to generation. We hear of Hugo, a noted Mexican archeologist, and of his young son, Victor, who were once the Count's houseguests. He tells of their time in France, of their complicated pasts and their uncertain relationships. This is a story of lost memory and failed promises, one about the past's unbending influence on the present.

Distant Relations is an ambitious novel whose tale of confused familial relations explodes into one about the conflict between the Old World and the New.

Details

ISBN-10 1-56478-345-6
ISBN-13 9781564783455
Publication Date Apr 2006
Nb of pages 225
Dimensions 5.5 x 8 in.

Summary

 


Excerpt

My friend’s pallor was not unusual. With the passing of the years his skin had become fused to his facial bones and his gesturing, slender hands had become translucent.

I had seen him shortly after his return from Mexico, which seemed to have somewhat dissipated his resemblance to a civilized phantom. Sun had given him density, fleshly presence. I almost didn’t recognize him.

The return of his habitual pallor should have made him look entirely familiar, but there was something about his manner. When I saw him alone at his table in the club dining room, I walked over to greet him and to suggest we have lunch together.
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Reviews

Press Reviews

Spectator
The ability of Carlos Fuentes to fascinate, baffle and provoke puts him alongside Nabokov and Calvino as one of the mandarin magicians of literature. Of the three, he is the most adventurous . . . The ingenuity of this book is remarkable.

The Listener
There are many good things in Distant Relations . . . and the final pages are a tour de force.

Virginia Quarterly Review
Fuentes here writes in his most imaginative and personal style yet.

Washington Post
Carlos Fuentes' new novel, Distant Relations, is a ghostly poem, a vexing puzzle, an amazingly constructed argument on the relatedness of human spirits, past and present.

New Statesman
Distant Relations is a brilliant, tantalizing novel.

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Genres : Fiction : Latin America
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