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Memorias de Un Hijueputa / Memoirs of a Son of a Bitch
Contributor(s): Vallejo, Fernando (Author)
ISBN: 9585496461     ISBN-13: 9789585496460
Publisher: Alfaguara
OUR PRICE:   $17.96  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Language: Spanish
Published: November 2019
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
Physical Information: 0.5" H x 5.9" W x 9.4" (0.53 lbs) 420 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Fernando Vallejo vuelve a la carga con una poderosa diatriba contra la clase pol tica colombiana y lo que sucede en el mundo.

El memorialista loco de este libro sostiene que la democracia es el pernicioso sistema electoral de unos corruptos que van tras el bot n del poder, pero que le permite por lo menos al ciudadano escoger entre el malo y el peor; que las patrias solo traen guerras; que las religiones han impedido el surgimiento de la moral y que por eso siguen existiendo los mataderos y nos seguimos comiendo a los animales; y que entre patrias y religiones han logrado que hoy por hoy estemos en un mundo embotellado y atestado pero eso s , muy bien cimentado: sobre un arsenal nuclear. Tesis que el lector sensato rechazar como desprop sitos, pero que le har n gracia dada la forma tan disparatada en que se han planteado.

Convertido en el m s poderoso se or del pa s por un golpe militar que lo catapulta al mando supremo, le rebaja una buena parte de su poblaci n con una serie de happenings, como l los llama, dirigidos al fin que l considera el m s noble: liberar a su patria, la empecinada Colombia, de s misma.

De las memorias que escribi al abandonar el poder por su propia voluntad y cansancio, no qued m s que un legajo de papeluchos inconexos que le dej a su sobrina, una editora de libros pornogr ficos y libertarios que medio los orden y les puso t tulo.

ENGLISH DESCRIPTION

Fernando Vallejo returns to the forefront with a powerful tirade against the Colombian political class and what is happening in the world.

The mad protagonist argues that democracy is the malicious electoral system of corrupt people who go after the loot of power, but one that at least allows citizens to choose between the bad and the worst; that patriotism only brings wars; that religions have prevented the rise of morality; and that is why slaughterhouses still exist and we continue to eat animals. It is a thesis that sensible readers will reject as nonsense, but one they will enjoy reading given the crazy way in which these subjects have been raised.

Turned into the most powerful man in the country by a military coup that catapults him to be supreme commander, he disregards a good part of the population with a series of "happenings", as he calls them, aiming towards an outcome he considers the most noble: to free his homeland, a stubborn Colombia, from itself.

From the memories he wrote down when he left power by his own will and weariness, not much remained except for a bundle of loose papers that he left to his niece, an editor of pornographic and libertarian books, who carelessly placed them in some random order and gave them a title.