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Country of To [Minkštas viršelis]

3.47/5 (118 ratings by Goodreads)
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A Crime Reads Best International Crime Fiction of 2023  One of Crime Reads most anticipated LatinX Horror and Crime Fiction of 2023



This sumptuously written thriller asks probing questions about how we live with each other and with our planet.

Raised on his wits on the streets of Central America, the Cobra, a young debt collector and gang enforcer, has never had the chance to discern between right and wrong, until hes assigned the murder of Polo, a prominent human rights activistand his friend. When his conscience gives him pause and his patrón catches on, a remote Mayan community offers the Cobra a potential refuge, but the people there are up against predatory mining companies. With danger encroaching, the Cobra is forced to confront his violent past and make a decision about what hes willing to risk in the future, and who it will be for.

Following the Cobra, Polo, a faction of drug-dealing oligarchs, and Jacobo, a child caught in the crosshairs, Rey Rosa maps an extensive web of corruption upheld by decades of political oppression. A scathing indictment of exploitation in all its forms, The Country of Toó is a gripping account of what it means to consider societal change under the constant threat of violence.

Recenzijos

Praise for The Country of Toó

"When tasked with assassinating a friend, a Guatemalan gang enforcer flees to the Mayan countryside, where the struggle to keep community land from mining companies forces him to rethink his allegiances." New York Times



No remark is casual, no scene a mere illustrative pass-through. Something we think is a minor event turns into a significant plot twist. Its strange and uncomfortable, what appear to be fragmented events gradually coalesce with brilliant force, building toward the Cobras assassination assignment of Polo. NPR



"The Country of Toó is ... about a lot of things, including political corruption and reform; a young mans surreal recovery from a traumatic injury; and the moral crisis faced by a man known only as the Cobra, who has begun to feel the strain of years of working as a hired gun. Tonally, the work shifts from realistic to dreamlike and back again; the result is a complex reckoning with histories both personal and national." Tobias Carroll, Brooklyn Rail



"The Country of Toó is like little else youll read this year, and its another strong entry in its authors impressive bibliography." Words Without Borders



"An appealing panorama of both the country and the different cultures and forcesfrom Mayan to global-capitalistat work in it." M.A. Orthofer, The Complete Review



"Ably translated into English by Stephen Henighan, the narrative driven and distinctive storytelling style of novelist Rodrigo Rey Rosa raises The Country of Toó from a basic crime thriller to that of a work of literary excellence." Midwest Book Review



"A deep, satirically streaked dive into the violent culture of Guatemala." Kirkus Reviews



"Rey Rosa illuminates how an Indigenous culture is besieged by outsiders ... [ and] leaves readers with plenty to chew on." Publishers Weekly

Praise for Rodrigo Rey Rosa

Intense By the end of this novel you feel glad to have come out on the other side and carry the hope that Rodrigo Rey Rosa, those close to him, and his fellow countrymen will do so, too. New York Journal of Books

Rodrigo Rey Rosa creates stories of mythic proportions. San Francisco Chronicle 

[ Human Matter's] exploration of the history of violence and secrecy in Central America has obvious relevance to today's politics, but the tale of a writer trying to understand the truth behind the things he's seeing gives the novel a resounding, universal echo. Vanity Fair

Rey Rosa, a Guatemalan writer often compared to Roberto Bolano was inspired to write a meta-novel about his experiences [ visiting Guatemala's National Police archive] and the stories he uncovered. The result reads like the journal of a heartbroken researcher who stumbles on the darkest truths about his native country. Chicago Tribune

Wonderful The tension between the fundamental pleasure of the novelwhich comes from trying to piece together meaning out of the disparate information available to us and the narrators insistence that its futilecreates a weirdly gratifying reading experience. Chicago Review of Books

To read him is to learn how to write and is also an invitation to the pure pleasure of allowing oneself to be borne along by sinister or fantastic stories ... To say that Rey Rosa is the most rigorous writer of my generation, and at the same time the clearest, the one who weaves his stories together best, the most brilliant of them all, is not to say anything new. Roberto Bolańo 

Daugiau informacijos

Print run: 2,000 copies

Co-op available Advance reader copies Edelweiss digital review copies National TV & radio campaign National print media campaign  Online and social media campaign E-book available at same time as print edition Outreach to eco-lit, environmental, and translation media Excerpts in Lit Hub, Electric Lit
Born and raised in Guatemala City, Rodrigo Rey Rosa is the author of five collections of short stories and more than a dozen novels that have been published in sixteen languages. Among his works available in English are The Beggars Knife, The Pelcari Project (both translated by expatriate American author Paul Bowles), The Good Cripple, The African Shore, Human Matter, and Chaos: A Fable. Rey Rosa has been awarded Guatemalas national literature prize, Chinas Best Foreign Book Award, and, for his lifes work, the prestigious José Donoso Prize in Chile.



Stephen Henighans translations have twice been longlist finalists for the Best Translated Book Award and once for the International Dublin Literary Award. Henighan is the author of ten books of fiction, most recently the short story collection Blue River and Red Earth (2018) and the novel The World of After (2021).