Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Rainbow Sandals Outlets

[Critical Review] The future is ours ... and the present? [PART TWO]. FIRST IMPRESSIONS, Peru. Ricardo Sumalavia Blog. (August 2008)


" Well, read an anthology more sixty authors take their time. I must say that I started with authors who already knew, say that with the elderly. It was nice reunion with the prose of Venezuelans Slavko Supcic or Luigi Armando Castañeda, always playful, more closely. I read the story of José Pérez Reyes because some years ago he gave me his book, I read anything and not get excited. Hoped to reconcile with his writing, but I confess I was half. The suggestion that has gained in fluidity, demolishes soon overwhelmed with images like: "Suddenly the rain wet aggressively dropped glove." Then I read Carlos Wynter Melo. This story already had before and, without doubt, bet on the winner Wynter, because I think this story fit in perfectly all his writing. With tales of Neuman and Gonzalo Andrés Garcés, what I can tell. Gives the impression that the craft of writing they had learned before birth. With Alejandro Zambra passes that just do not understand what you're telling, you sense that there is a personal world behind. It goes beyond the fact of storytelling. If looking for something else, he already found. I admire the audacity of the story of Javier Payet, but I read his text much more engaging. That boldness also found in Antonio Ungar and I'm fascinated with the plasticity of his prose, with the force of his narrative. After such excitement, obviously, could not read with the same eyes tales Antonio Ortuño and Ricardo Silva Romero. I liked both stories: effective direct.
Naturally, I went to the Peruvian writers. I was struck by the careful selection of authors. Jeremiah Santiago Gamboa Roncagliolo and attached to the action, the weight of the environment, are quite effective. At the other extreme, Marco García Falcón, Alexis and Carlos Yushimito Iparraguirre. I like what I write three: his prose carefully, its high level of suggestion, but, I confess, I would find more differences between the three. More daring tales seem Diego Luis Trelles and Savior, as if trying to reinvent itself from its earliest texts.
I know what I'm saying nothing will change. Best. I still have to refer to others. Have noticed that I did not mention any women. With them I have nothing else to say. It takes time to understand me. "

Pictured: Antonio Ungar

0 comments:

Post a Comment