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The Obscene Bird of Night

unabridged, centennial edition

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 10 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 10 weeks

Newly revised and updated by Megan McDowell, and with a new introduction by Alejandro Zambra: at last, the unabridged, centennial edition of Donoso's terrifying masterpiece sees the light of day

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.

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    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2024
      A newly revised translation of Chilean novelist Donoso's daring, deeply surreal exploration of self, isolation, and Latin American mysticism, including 20 pages of text that was cut from an earlier edition. A squiggly but unbroken line runs from Kafka's Metamorphosis through Camus' The Stranger to this 1970s cult classic and beyond to modern relations like Mariana Enr�quez's Our Share of Night (2023) and Gerardo S�mano C�rdova's Monstrilio (2023). Set in a haunted nunnery overstuffed with grotesqueries, decaying memories, and nightmares both real and imagined, this labyrinthine novel is confounding to understand even as its disturbing imagery and universal dread linger. Combined with a narrator who is so unreliable that his very identity is an enigma, the fragmented narrative heightens the sense of dread and disorientation. In a decidedly nonlinear fashion, we eventually ferret out that the narrator is Humberto Pe�aloza, a writer of little means who's in over his head. He's been hired by Don Jer�nimo de Azcoit�a, a wealthy and influential aristocrat being groomed for political office, to write about his family legacy. By the time the story begins, the future senator is obsessed with producing an heir, which his wife, In�s, cannot. Meanwhile, the narrator has somehow become "Mudito"--a supposedly deaf-mute giant banished to one of the Don Jer�nimo family's dilapidated estates, which is now housing 40 outcast women, five orphans, and three nuns. The whole domestic scene doesn't get any less weird when one deformed child is introduced and the narrator is ordered to hire a menagerie of "first-class monsters," educators with similar deformities, to look after the offspring, called only "Boy." With shades of The Island of Doctor Moreau, Don Jer�nimo tries alternately to hide and cure his progeny while Humberto/Mudito becomes deeply entwined in the child's life. Having either fully captured or utterly dismayed his audience by now, Donoso lets his story disintegrate into a surreal m�lange of madness, cryptic rituals, and the proverbial abyss staring back. Your mileage may vary. A welcome, disturbing reminder of the power of magical realism to distort and reveal by turns.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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