I give you my silence A novel

Mario Vargas Llosa, 1936-2025

Book - 2026

"In his final novel, the Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa returns to his native Peru"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2026.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Mario Vargas Llosa, 1936-2025 (author)
Other Authors
Adrian Nathan West (translator)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Spanish in 2023 by Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial, Spain, as Le dedico mi silencio"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
246 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374616250
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Nobel laureate Vargas Llosa (Conversation in the Cathedral), who died earlier this year, tackles Peruvian history and culture in this searching novel, published in Spanish in 2023, about the limits of idealism. Toño Azpilcueta, a scholar of Peruvian criollo music, loses his professorship when the Peruvian studies department is eliminated at the National University of San Marcos. Nonetheless, he continues to write articles about the music of his homeland while his seamstress wife, Matilde, supports their household. One night, at the invitation of a renowned intellectual, he attends a private performance by criollo guitarist Lalo Molfino. Soon after the event, Azpilcueta learns that Molfino has died, and he resolves to write a book about the guitarist's life and what he naively views as the unifying potential of criollo music in Peru. Supported by a small investment from a friend, he travels to Molfino's coastal hometown to learn more about the guitarist. Azpilcueta doggedly pursues the project and publishes a successful book, but his obsession with perfecting the story with subsequent editions turns out to be his downfall. Vargas Llosa blends rich details of Peruvian music with a canny depiction of human folly. It's a satisfying conclusion to a remarkable career. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A parting novel, short and brooding, by the late Nobel Prize--winning author. The Peruvian writer and sometime politician Vargas Llosa (1936-2025) intended to end his writing career with a study of Jean-Paul Sartre, "who was my master when I was a young man." This novel, however, was his last work, and it owes something to the bleaker existential literature, with perhaps a nod to Elias Canetti'sAuto-da-Fé as a study of a man driven bonkers by books and ideas. The man in question is Toño Azpilcueta, "a scholar of creole music" who had given most of his life to collecting records and and being badly paid for writing essays and reviews while hoping to be named to a university chair in Peruvian studies. His world changes when the self-styled "proletarian intellectual" attends a concert at the home of a fellow gourmand of music and discovers a brilliant young guitarist whose audience, Toño rhapsodizes, responds with "reverential silence." (The novel's title is meaningful.) That the young man is insufferable and soon absents himself does nothing to dissuade Toño from arriving at the eccentric thesis that, in the years following the defeat of the Shining Path, only Peruvian vernacular music could give the nation a sense of unity and direction. He writes a book to that effect, ever dissatisfied with the argument and altering it edition after edition, gaining that university post in the bargain and becoming a well-known figure in a city where he'd previously been nearly anonymous. It doesn't take long for that world to come crashing down. Along the way, Vargas Llosa takes subtle digs at academia, psychiatry, politics, Peruvian society, the literary world, and the fever dreams that inspire messianic projects that inevitably fail. It's not the masterpiece thatAunt Julia and the Scriptwriter andThe War of the End of the World were, but it has its charms. A graceful, pensive farewell by a master storyteller. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.