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The sound things make when they fall

‘One of the most original new voices in Latin America’
Mario Vargas Llosa
Colombia, 2009. The narrator of the story, the young law lecturer Antonio Yamarra, reads in a magazine about the killing of a hippopotamus that had escaped from the zoo owned by the notorious Pablo Escobar. The article takes him back to the mid-1990s, when the Colombian government’s war with Escobar’s cocaine cartel was raging in the streets, forests and skies of Colombia. At that time, Yamarra meets a solitary billiards player, a ‘former pilot’ by his own account, whose murder propels the narrator into a quest to unravel the mystery, but also into a process of redefining his own identity and his relationships with his people. His investigations will take him back to the turbulent 1960s that changed the world, just before the drug trade trapped an entire generation in a living nightmare, in a cycle of violence and fear.
  • Author Juan Gabriel Vásquez
  • Translation Achilles Kyriakidis
  • Cover design/illustration Christos Kourtoglou
  • Pages: 296
  • ISBN: 978-960-572-033-9
  • Publication: 2014
  • Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature

The Sound of Things Falling is the finest Latin American novel I have read in recent years. Winner of the Alfaguara Prize and the IMPAC Dublin International Literary Award, the Colombian Juan Gabriel Vásquez speaks in his third – and darkest – novel about his era, the era of drug trafficking before the Escobar regime, employing a striking form of realism.

– Nikos Xenios, bookpress.gr

There are passages in this novel that are strongly reminiscent of the writing of Nobel laureate (1982) Gabriel García Márquez, in the famous way he linked the future with the past and the present. Juan Gabriel Vásquez was born in Bogotá 44 years after Márquez, and belongs to a literary generation that is trying to find its voice outside the shadow of the greats of the ‘Latin American boom’ (Márquez – Fuentes – Llosa), yet without rejecting them.

– Mikelia Chartoulari, Eφημερίδα των Συντακτών

In his writing, we recognise influences from the Anglo-Saxon literary tradition, Conrad, S. Bellows, and Auster, whilst his style is closer to that of Cortázar, Borges (primarily) and Bolaño than to that of his great compatriot, G.G. Márquez. A writer who will occupy us greatly in the future.

– Librofilo

Among the many observations he records about life and the universe in this beautifully translated book by the Colombian author, the power of truth that shatters all illusions seems to be the most crucial: before the realisation of death, love, poetry, art and Justice appear absolute; nothing is capable of disturbing their magical aura.

– Tina Mandilara, LiFO

Juan Gabriel Vásquez

Juan Gabriel Vásquez was born in Bogotá, Colombia, in 1973, and studied Latin American Literature at the Sorbonne. He has published eight novels, three collections of short stories, and four collections of literary essays.

His books are available in Greek from Ikaros Publications: The Sound of Things Falling (2014), The Informers (2015), The Shape of Remains (2018), The Sublimations (2019), Songs for the Fire (2020) and Turning the Gaze Back (2021).

He has been honoured with numerous international awards, the most significant of which are the Premio Alfaguara (2011), the English Pen Award (2012), the Prix Roger Caillois (2012), the Premio Von Rezzori (2013), the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (2014), the Premio Real Academia Española (2014) and the Biblioteca de Narrativa Colombiana Award (2020).

His books have been published in 28 languages and in more than 40 countries. In 2016, he was awarded the title of Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French Republic.

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The sound things make when they fall

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