{"id":133336,"date":"2019-02-05T11:00:38","date_gmt":"2019-02-05T16:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=133336"},"modified":"2019-02-05T12:12:36","modified_gmt":"2019-02-05T17:12:36","slug":"posthumous-bolano","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2019\/02\/05\/posthumous-bolano\/","title":{"rendered":"Posthumous Bola\u00f1o"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>In his new monthly column, Archive of Longing, Dustin Illingworth examines recently released books, with a focus on the small presses, the reissues, the esoteric, and the newly translated.<\/em><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_133338\" style=\"width: 1010px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/02\/roberto-bolano-1.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-133338\" class=\"wp-image-133338 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/02\/roberto-bolano-1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1000\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/02\/roberto-bolano-1.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/02\/roberto-bolano-1-300x180.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/02\/roberto-bolano-1-768x461.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-133338\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Right image: stencil of Roberto Bola\u00f1o from Barcelona, 2012<\/p><\/div>\n<p>The Chilean novelist Roberto Bola\u00f1o idolized Jorge Luis Borges. \u201cI could live under a table reading Borges,\u201d he once told an interviewer. In the Argentine metaphysician, Bola\u00f1o found a path through the Latin American Boom\u2019s sticky, commercial aftermath. Borges, with his elegance, his recursiveness, his allegorical purity and erudition, may at first blush seem worlds apart from the violent, hard-boiled predilections that came to define Bola\u00f1o\u2019s oeuvre. But to think so is to overlook Bola\u00f1o\u2019s subtle comic chops and lifelong interest in pulp. One of the great gifts Bola\u00f1o bestows upon Borges in return is how, in essays and interviews, he dispels the aura of brainy sobriety that tends to rarify his hero into an abstraction. Bola\u00f1o absorbed the cosmopolitanism and menace of Borges\u2019s lesser-known stories\u2014he was especially fond of the detective potboilers Borges wrote, pseudonymously, with Adolfo Bioy Casares. But he also pursued something more corporeal, savage, and belatedly modern in his own work. To a remarkable degree, Bola\u00f1o\u2019s characters\u2014all of them poets or <em>poets manqu\u00e9s<\/em>, regardless of their stated profession\u2014delineate the aches and appetites that moor the gentle madness of their art. They eat ham sandwiches, fuck in stairwells, fight, sob, ride motorcycles, drink coffee, and read until their eyes burn. They are often poor or hungry, morally benighted, naive, wretched with longing and a writer\u2019s remote gratifications. \u201cLiterature is basically a dangerous calling,\u201d Bola\u00f1o said during a 1999 acceptance speech for the R\u00f3mulo Gallegos Prize, and his work, like a slow mugging, poses a persistent, shiv-sharp question: What price would you pay for literature?<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Bola\u00f1o died of liver failure in 2003, at the age of fifty. His posthumous legacy, like a military map, has come to describe a clash of violent loyalties. The <em>By Night in Chile<\/em> contingent swears by that novella\u2019s glittering confessional mode. In <em>By Night<\/em> a Jesuit priest laments the acquiescence of the Chilean literary establishment under Pinochet (\u201csilences,\u201d he says, \u201crise to heaven too\u201d). Then there are those more partial to the apocalyptic noir of <em>2666<\/em>, which is, in my opinion, the richest, grimmest, and, yes, greatest novel of our young, doomed century. The nomadic melancholy and cracked self-portraiture of <em>The Savage Detectives<\/em> seems destined to be the central text of a future literary cult. Though there is a degree of overlap between these allegiances, they are nonetheless deeply rooted in an individual devotion. To encounter Bola\u00f1o at a particular time in one\u2019s life is to be psychically branded.<\/p>\n<p>Bola\u00f1o, like Borges before him, wrote only poetry into his thirties. <em>The Spirit of Science Fiction<\/em>, newly available in English thanks to the brilliant work of longtime Bola\u00f1o translator Natasha Wimmer, was written in 1984, years before he had fully transitioned to fiction. (He would begin to write novels and stories more seriously in 1990, largely for mercenary reasons: he had become a father.) How do we read and analyze the early, minor works of literary deities? They seem to reach us obliquely, warped by the dense knowledge of what came after. For the Bola\u00f1o devotee, reading <em>The Spirit of Science Fiction<\/em> is a little like glimpsing the graceful form hiding within the block of marble. The book\u2019s loose, associative style, wounded idealism, and tender carnality anticipate many of his later novelistic preoccupations. The book\u2019s very premise\u2014two young poets drift around the literary underworld of Mexico City\u2014reads like a dress rehearsal for <em>The Savage Detectives<\/em>, similarly soaked in poetry, disillusion, and longing. The novel is dappled with recognizably Bola\u00f1an pleasures, though they are mostly incidental. What <em>The Spirit of Science Fiction <\/em>offers most is the tingle of the nascent. It allows us to perceive the avalanche in the snowball before it rolls downhill.<\/p>\n<p>Bola\u00f1o\u2019s work resists summary. Like a cubist painting, his plots are a blur of perpetual, adjacent motion. Much is intuited, or inhaled like an atmosphere. In <em>The Spirit of Science Fiction<\/em> he is already at home in this mode, testing the narrative pliability of poetic delirium and oracular grimness. The book\u2019s protagonists, Remo and Jan, are young poets in Mexico City, eager to establish themselves as literary fixtures. Remo spends his nights among a cadre of young writers, seeking pleasure and understanding in the cafes and bathhouses of the labyrinthine city. Meanwhile, hermetic Jan holes up in their shared apartment, writing letters to science fiction luminaries. While Bola\u00f1o makes a few Bellovian gestures toward the picaresque\u2014\u201cI believed that nothing bad would ever happen to us in that welcoming city,\u201d Remo says early on. \u201cHow near and how far from what fate had in store for me! How sad and transparent that first Mexican smile appears now in memory!\u201d\u2014the many set pieces, once kindled, turn such comparisons to ash. We simply follow Bola\u00f1o up his ladder of fragments, risking vertigo to marvel at the view.<\/p>\n<p>Remo\u2019s sections contain the most plot-driven elements. He attends a literary workshop\u2014\u201clike a tiny dance club for shy, boring people\u201d\u2014where he befriends Jos\u00e9 Arco, a kindly motorcycle-riding poet-rebel. Jos\u00e9 and Remo explore the mysterious explosion of literary magazines in Mexico City. (They suspect this proliferation foretells the coming of an ill-defined revolution.) Over the course of their investigation, they fall in with a group of enticingly wild poets, one of whom, Laura, Remo falls in love with. Bola\u00f1o often transmutes his romantic impulses into surreality, or vice versa, a love laced with the lysergic: \u201cThe only thing that was real (I mean supremely real) was Laura\u2019s smile from across the room, her meteorite smile, fading half smile, barely there smile, friend smile, smoke smile, knife-in-an-arsenal smile, pensive smile, and smile\u2014finally\u2014meeting mine without pretense: smiles sought, smiles seeking each other.\u201d The final section of the novel, entitled \u201cMexican Manifesto,\u201d takes place in the bathhouses Remo and Laura frequent together. Its foggy, crepuscular atmosphere\u2014steam-filled rooms, slick tiles, unwilling male prostitutes, sleeping pimps\u2014is an early example of Bola\u00f1o\u2019s effortless conjuring of nameless, uncanny dread.<\/p>\n<p>There is something richer and stranger at work in Jan\u2019s chapters. The letters he sends to his favorite science fiction writers\u2014Ursula K. Le Guin, Fritz Leiber, and James Tiptree Jr., to name a few\u2014betray his cataclysmic anxiety that geography might limit genre. Jan (who later reveals his alias to be Roberto Bola\u00f1o) is working on a science fiction novel but questions whether great science fiction can be written by a South American. \u201cI try to learn, study, observe but I always come to the same conclusion: it\u2019s not easy, and I\u2019m in Latin America,\u201d he writes to Le Guin. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy, and to add insult to injury, I was born in Chile.\u201d His ability to parse reality is impaired by this fixation, and each missive, ticking like a Geiger counter, tracks the radioactivity of his paranoia:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>While I was perched on the roof gazing through my binoculars at the dark rooftops of other buildings, a question came into my mind: how many science fiction novels have been written in Paraguay? On the surface, it seems like a stupid question, but it made so much sense to me just then that it kept coming back to me, like a catchy pop song. Were the closed windows of Mexico City really Paraguay? Were the storm and the rooftops that I was watching through the binoculars really the science fiction of Paraguay?<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Love\u2014or, rather, sex\u2014provides Jan with an imagined future closer to home. After falling for a prize-winning poet, Ang\u00e9lica (another Ang\u00e9lica would win the Laura Damian Prize in <em>The Savage Detectives<\/em>), he writes to Philip Jos\u00e9 Farmer, the science fiction legend who he believes has written most radically about sex and the future. \u201cI\u2019m seventeen, and maybe someday I\u2019ll write decent science fiction stories. A week ago, I lost my virginity,\u201d he concludes this final letter. There is a tender joke from Bola\u00f1o embedded here. For a besotted teenager, what could be more speculative, more galactic, than sex?<\/p>\n<p>The critic Sarah Kerr has said that Bola\u00f1o\u2019s vision is fierce, not total. He is a kinetic, epiphanic writer, and even his earliest works tremble like a whirring, unpredictable machine. Is this curious, ephemeral novel, then, something to celebrate? That\u2019s difficult to say. It\u2019s neither the thin effort of an apprentice nor a masterpiece on par with the work of his later years. <em>The Spirit of Science Fiction<\/em> functions as a kind of key to the jeweled box of Bola\u00f1o\u2019s fictions, an index of the images that would come to obsess him. While new readers may wish to start with the famous works on which his legacy rests, longtime Bola\u00f1o fans will doubtless enjoy this familiar cocktail of sorrow and ecstasy. We find in Bola\u00f1o\u2019s entropic poetry the same thing Remo finds in the sprawl of Mexico City: \u201cNot a melancholy sadness but a devastating, paradoxical sadness that cried out for life, radiant life, wherever it might be.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/fiction\/6083\/the-third-reich-part-i-roberto-bolano\">Subscribers can read Roberto Bola\u00f1o\u2019s <\/a><\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/fiction\/6083\/the-third-reich-part-i-roberto-bolano\">The Third Reich<\/a><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/fiction\/6083\/the-third-reich-part-i-roberto-bolano\"> in our archives<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Dustin Illingworth is a writer in Southern California. His work has appeared in\u00a0<\/em>The Atlantic<em>,<\/em>\u00a0<em>the\u00a0<\/em>Times Literary Supplement<em>, and the\u00a0<\/em>Los Angeles Times<em>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Is this recently released early Bola\u00f1o novel something to celebrate? That\u2019s difficult to say.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1225,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[48577],"tags":[10081,48580,24,7112,48581],"class_list":["post-133336","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-archive-of-longing","tag-10081","tag-by-night-in-chile","tag-roberto-bolano","tag-the-savage-detectives","tag-the-spirit-of-science-fiction"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Posthumous Bola\u00f1o by Dustin Illingworth<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Is this recently released early Bola\u00f1o novel something to celebrate? 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