The Informers
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Published Reviews
Publisher's Weekly Review
Betrayals public and private collide in Colombian author Vùsquez's first novel to appear in the States, a crushing and beautifully tricky novel. Gabriel Santoro's publication of a book about a family friend, Sara Guterman, a German Jew who arrived in Colombia with her family in 1938, unexpectedly enrages his father, a famous professor of rhetoric (also named Gabriel Santoro) who prefers that the past remain forgotten. When the elder Gabriel has a change of heart (after a health crisis), it coincides with a sexual relationship he begins with Angelina, his physiotherapist. But after Gabriel confesses to Angelina long-held past transgressions shortly before his accidental death, Angelina turns against Gabriel on national television while the younger Gabriel watches. The younger Gabriel then delves into Sara's memories of wartime intrigue and anguish revolving around suspected Nazi sympathizers. But Gabriel's lust for the truth makes him susceptible to committing harsh betrayals of his own. In Vùsquez's intricate narrative, morality is ambiguous and as treacherous as the early-1990s Bogotù backdrop, and its intelligence and unsparing tone will hold readers rapt through its many twists and turns. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Book Review
Leisurely paced, intensely focused tale of collusion and intrigue, spotlighting Colombia's German community before, during and after World War II. In 1988, journalist Gabriel Santoro published A Life in Exile, the story of a Jewish refugee who fled to Colombia in the years preceding the war. Gabriel wrote the book, he tells us, to give some perspective on the struggles of such emigrants. His motives didn't impress his father, also named Gabriel, a leading intellectual in Bogot with a particular contempt for the shallowness and ephemerality of journalism. Father wrote a scathing review of the book that went far beyond the bounds of necessity or good taste and raised questions about his psychological need to make such an extreme condemnation. Perhaps he has something to hide? When he phones his son three years later, in the novel's opening pages, is he trying to make amends? Several other events, past and present, conspire to pique the journalist's curiosity. Why did Konrad Deresser, another member of the German-Colombian community, commit suicide shortly after the war when his son Enrique denounced him as a collaborator? Is the 1991 death of Santoro p're in a car crash really an accident? Along the way we meet a range of characters, some well integrated into Colombian culture despite their German roots, others more blatant and unabashed about their support for Hitler's policies even after the war. With both journalistic and personal reasons to pursue the truth, the younger Santoro tracks down Enrique, though he first has to endure the opprobrium of Enrique's son Sergio, as well as Angelina, the older Gabriel's mistress and perhaps betrayer. An impassioned exploration of how the past erupts into the present and continues to shape our personalities and our fates. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Reviews
U.S. readers might need reminding, but Latin American literature has gone way beyond magical realism. Colombian Vasquez's novel centers on a young man whose biography of a family friend has just been savaged in print by his own father. Evidently, family secrets abound. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Betrayals public and private collide in Colombian author Vsquez's first novel to appear in the States, a crushing and beautifully tricky novel. Gabriel Santoro's publication of a book about a family friend, Sara Guterman, a German Jew who arrived in Colombia with her family in 1938, unexpectedly enrages his father, a famous professor of rhetoric (also named Gabriel Santoro) who prefers that the past remain forgotten. When the elder Gabriel has a change of heart (after a health crisis), it coincides with a sexual relationship he begins with Angelina, his physiotherapist. But after Gabriel confesses to Angelina long-held past transgressions shortly before his accidental death, Angelina turns against Gabriel on national television while the younger Gabriel watches. The younger Gabriel then delves into Sara's memories of wartime intrigue and anguish revolving around suspected Nazi sympathizers. But Gabriel's lust for the truth makes him susceptible to committing harsh betrayals of his own. In Vsquez's intricate narrative, morality is ambiguous and as treacherous as the early-1990s Bogot backdrop, and its intelligence and unsparing tone will hold readers rapt through its many twists and turns. (Aug.)
[Page 28]. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Vasquez, J. G., & McLean, A. (2009). The Informers . Penguin Publishing Group.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Vasquez, Juan Gabriel and Anne McLean. 2009. The Informers. Penguin Publishing Group.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Vasquez, Juan Gabriel and Anne McLean. The Informers Penguin Publishing Group, 2009.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Vasquez, J. G. and McLean, A. (2009). The informers. Penguin Publishing Group.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Vasquez, Juan Gabriel, and Anne McLean. The Informers Penguin Publishing Group, 2009.
Copy Details
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