For Women in Translation Month, we asked our favorite authors and translators share a glimpse into their reading lives with rapid-fire picks for favorite women writers in translation.
Read MoreMegan McDowell
Carlos Fonseca Named Among Latin America’s Best Young Writers
Like the New Yorker’s “20 Under 40,” the Hay Festival Bogotá39 list is announced every ten years and is considered a signal of writers to watch in the decade to come. Other honorees include Valeria Luiselli, Samanta Schweblin, and Emiliano Monge, whose novel The Arid Sky will be published by Restless in 2018. The authors will be showcased in a new Hay Festival anthology, Bogotá39-2017, to be published by OneWorld in the UK.
Read MoreReviews for Costa Rican Author Carlos Fonseca's 'Colonel Lágrimas'
It was a thrill for Restless to see the first New York Times Book Review review of one of its books with Carlos Fonseca's Colonel Lágrimas. Loosely based on the strange life of theoretical mathematician, environmentalist, and enigmatic hermit Alexander Grothendieck, the novel weaves a many-layered tale of global politics and obsession. Read on to see what others are saying!
Praise for Colonel Lágrimas, by Carlos Fonseca
“Beware, reader, in these pages you will experience vertigo, anxiety and joy. You will become a ghostly presence in a Borgesian world, a camera obscura, where mathematics is a secret weapon, and memory the object of an archaeological pursuit. Loosely inspired by the eventful life of the French mathematician Alexander Grothendieck, Fonseca has created a gorgeous opera prima.… Colonel Lágrimas is playful and experimental in the tradition of writers like Calvino and Queneau. Fonseca employs the magic of perspective and shifting angles to summon a Cubist portrait of a very sleepy, insouciant old man who witnessed some of the great political events of the 20th century, from the Spanish Civil War to Vietnam.… Deftly translated, the voice remains sedate, elegant, whispered even; we wouldn’t want to wake the colonel.”
—Valerie Miles, The New York Times Book Review
“So much of the writing in Carlos Fonseca Suárez’s Colonel Lágrimas was just gorgeous, and Megan McDowell’s translation from the original Spanish managed to keep the beautiful complexity of the language intact.”
—Meg Nola, Foreword Reviews, 2016 Reviewer’s Choice
"An intriguing and unforgettable verbal kaleidoscope."
—Ricardo Piglia, author of Target in the Night and Artificial Respiration
“A true feat of literary ventriloquism and cinematic control, tinged with a humor and melancholy inspired by the human condition. Whether we think of it as a game of masks or as a Cubist portrait, Fonseca's novel reads like an Oulipian puzzle where historical memory can play hide-and-seek…. The novel has a panoramic and worldly vision. There's something vast, all-embracing, and decidedly humanist about the project.”
“In this pretty puzzle, Fonseca tests the limits of fiction.… Fonseca’s narration mimics the meandering matrix of memory or an esoteric police procedural by Jorge Luis Borges.… For lovers of literary and Latin American postmodern fiction.”
—Sara Martinez, Booklist
“Reading [Fonseca’s] work, one feels the presence of voices as disparate as those of W.G. Sebald, Alexander Von Humboldt, Simón Bolívar and Roberto Bolaño, among others. Fonseca is, without a doubt, a cosmopolitan offspring of cultural globalization as well as an attentive inheritor of both literary and cultural history…. Through an attentive and rigorous attention to detail, Fonseca is able to construct a collage where the mathematician’s life finds its ultimate meaning amidst a series of series of historical, metaphysical and poetic fragments that end up giving shape to a fascinating literary artifact that shines like an eclectic mosaic…. Colonel Lágrimas is a novel that showcases the craft of writing. Throughout its pages, it becomes apparent that its writerly resources are managed with a certain fluency and experimentation but, at the same time, with notable confidence.”
—Tomás Peters, Electric Literature
“Though the novel nods mostly to García Márquez, Fonseca plays with the possibilities of hypertext raised by Julio Cortázar, and there are hints of Bolaño and perhaps even of younger contemporary Daniel Galera …. a lively, smart study of a decidedly offbeat character.”
—Kirkus Reviews
All Reviews and Features
3AM Magazine: symbolic grenade: the historical provocations of carlos fonseca’s colonel lágrimas
Asymptote: Carlos Fonseca on Masks, Perspective, and History
BOMB: Carlos Fonseca by Chloe Aridjis
Brookline Booksmith: Small Press Book Club pick
Complete Review: Colonel Lágrimas
Electric Literature: Carlos Fonseca & The Liberated Novel
Foreword Reviews: Colonel Lágrimas
Foyles Bookshop: Staff Pick
The Guardian: Translation Tuesday: Colonel Lágrimas by Carlos Fonseca
Kirkus: Colonel Lágrimas
Literal: Colonel Lágrimas: Excerpt
Literary Hub: All Writing is a Kind of Exile: Ilan Stavans and Carlos Fonseca in Conversation
Literary South: Episode 25 - Book Club Edition
LitReactor: Bookshots: ‘Colonel Lágrimas’ by Carlos Fonseca Suárez
Minor Literatures: Colonel Lágrimas (excerpt)
New York Times Book Review: Literatura
Quarterly Conversation: Colonel Lágrimas by Carlos Fonseca
Tony’s Reading List: Colonel Lágrimas Review
The White Review: Excerpt: Colonel Lágrimas
Words without Borders: History & Language in the Information Age: An Interview with Carlos Fonseca
by Carlos Fonseca
Translated from the Spanish by Megan McDowell
“Beware, reader, in these pages you will experience vertigo, anxiety and joy. You will become a ghostly presence in a Borgesian world, a camera obscura, where mathematics is a secret weapon, and memory the object of an archaeological pursuit. Loosely inspired by the eventful life of the French mathematician Alexander Grothendieck, Fonseca has created a gorgeous opera prima.”
—Valerie Miles, New York Times Book Review
Paperback • ISBN: 9781632061034
Publication date: Oct 4, 2016