Obscene Bird of Night

Regular price €21.99
A01=Jose Donoso
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
alejandro zambra
aristocratic family
Author_Jose Donoso
automatic-update
B06=Hardie St. Martin
B06=Leonard Mades
B06=Megan McDowell
black magic
boom
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DS
Category=FK
Category=FMM
centennial edition
chile
chilean lit
COP=United States
dark
dark realism
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
eq_fantasy
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=2
exile
experimental
fantastical
innovative
jose donoso
kaleidoscopic
Language_English
latin american boom
latin american horror
magical realism
master slave narrative
masterpiece
megan mcdowell
monster
obscene bird of night
PA=Available
pinochet
political
Price_€10 to €20
PS=Active
revised edition
softlaunch
strange
terrifying
translation
unabridged
visionary writer
witches

Product details

  • ISBN 9780811232227
  • Weight: 443g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 203mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2024
  • Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days

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Deep in a maze of musty, forgotten hallways, Mudito rummages through piles of old newspapers. The mute caretaker of the crumbling former abbey, he is hounded by a coven of ancient witches who are bent on transforming him, bit by bit, into the terrifying imbunche: a twisted monster with all of its orifices sewn up, buried alive in its own body. Once, Mudito walked upright and spoke clearly; once he was the personal assistant to one of Chile’s most powerful politicians, Jerónimo de Azcoitía. Once, he ruled over a palace of monsters, built to shield Jeronimo’s deformed son from any concept of beauty. Once, he plotted with the wise woman Peta Ponce to bed Inés, Jerónimo’s wife. Mudito was Humberto, Jerónimo was strong, Inés was beautiful—once upon a time... Narrated in voices that shift and multiply, The Obscene Bird of Night frets the seams between master and slave, rich and poor, reality and nightmares, man and woman, self and other in a maniacal inquiry into the horrifying transformations that power can wreak on identity.

Now, star translator Megan McDowell has revised and updated the classic translation, restoring nearly twenty pages of previously untranslated text that was mysteriously cut from the 1972 edition. Newly complete, with missing motifs restored, plots deepened, and characters more richly shaded, Donoso’s pajarito (little bird), as he called it, returns to print to celebrate the centennial of its author’s birth in full plumage, as brilliant as it is bizarre.

One of the great Boom writers, José Donoso (1924–1996) wrote novels, novellas, short stories, and poetry. He worked stints as a shepherd in Patagonia and a stevedore in Buenos Aires before studying at Princeton and teaching at the Iowa Writers Workshop. He was twice a Guggenheim Fellow and won the William Faulkner Foundation Prize as well as Chile’s highest literary honor, the National Literature Prize, among many other awards.   Leonard Mades (1918–2017) taught comparative literature, French and Spanish at Hunter College, from which he retired as Professor Emeritus. The winner of a PEN International Prize for Translation, in the 1950s he worked for CARE in El Salvador, Haiti, and Bolivia. Megan McDowell has won the English PEN award, the Premio Valle-Inclán, and a 2020 Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; she also has been nominated four times for the International Booker Prize. She won the 2022 National Book Award in translation alongside Samanta Schweblin for Seven Empty Houses. Hardie St. Martin was born in 1924 in Belize. The translator of Vincente Aleixandre, Roque Dalton, Enrique Lihn, Nicanor Parra, and Luisa Valenzuela, he was a Guggenheim fellow and won a PEN International Translation Award. He died in 2007.