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The Informers

For anyone who has read all of Márquez’s books and is looking for a new Colombian novelist, Vásquez’s *The Informers* is a wonderful discovery.
―Colm Tóibin
When journalist Gabriel Santoro published his first book, a biography of a German woman who settled in Colombia shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, he could not have imagined that the most scathing review would be written by his own father. What lay behind the German woman’s seemingly innocuous confessions? What was it that made Santoro’s father feel betrayed? The book chronicles the young journalist’s quest to uncover the truth, however bitter it may ultimately be, travelling back in time until he reaches that terrible decade of the 1940s, when lives were destroyed, families torn apart and consciences sullied in Colombia.
  • Author Juan Gabriel Vásquez
  • Translation Achilles Kyriakidis
  • Cover design/illustration Christos Kourtoglou
  • Pages: 400
  • ISBN: 978-960-572-069-8
  • Publication: 2015
  • Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature

The result “of the sublime is not persuasion but ecstasy” (‘It is not persuasion but ecstasy that the sublime brings’) said Longinus in ‘On the Sublime’, the book which, together with Kennedy’s ‘The Art of Persuasion’, the father gives to his son. How do these two go together? The reader will realise this as they lose themselves in the three hundred pages of an exceptional psychological miniature, in yet another marvellous Greek translation by Achilleas Kyriakidis.

– Aristotelis Sainis, Efimerida ton Syntakton

"...Through his protagonist, Vázquez once again presents us with a seminal work, a profound insight into events that shaped situations in remote corners of the globe, many of which have remained in the shadows of history because no one has undertaken the task of unearthing them..."

– Yannis Antoniadis, culturenow.gr

"...His writing is rich in vocabulary and, in parts, poetic, with dramatic to tragic undertones; with elegant humour, a distinct yet subtle sense of loneliness and – another element I appreciate – perceptive observations that make you reflect on the human psyche, textual reality, private oblivion and collective memory; power, betrayal and silence. It is, ultimately, an important book for those who write history and those who live it."

– Bookworm-sue

The imaginative narrative woven by Vazquez is not merely a clash of generations, a deadlocked conflict between a successful father and a ‘failed’ son who fails to meet his father’s standards; it is something more: the handling of a collective and individual trauma rooted in cruel betrayal and deception.

– Nikos Davetas, Kathimerini

"...A story of betrayal and the domino effect of the consequences it triggered. At the same time, questions and concerns were raised about the extent to which a bleak and turbulent era of fear and insecurity can influence the behaviour and reactions of quiet, ordinary people, leading them to commit acts that are incomprehensible even to themselves..."

– Maria Diakantoni, Mommy Jammi

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 Informers

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