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The Dog Fighter

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The anonymous narrator of this remarkable debut novel is a young drifter in search of his future. The son of a passionate beauty and gentle doctor, he roams the border between the United States and Mexico, eventually settling in a sleepy Baja town on the verge of transformation. Here he learns to stand face-to-face with dogs in a makeshift ring, to fight for money and fame, and becomes involved with a powerful and corrupt entrepreneur. But when he finds friendship with a revolutionary old poet and love with a beautiful, innocent girl, everything changes. Caught between the ways of his past and the dreams of his future, he must make a devastating choice that could cost him everything.

The Dog Fighter is an exhilarating tale of brutality and violence, love and wisdom, heartbreak and redemption.

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2004

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Marc Bojanowski

4 books18 followers

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5 stars
81 (29%)
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107 (38%)
3 stars
65 (23%)
2 stars
19 (6%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for Richard.
Author 12 books329 followers
January 29, 2018
This is a forgotten gem, the tale of a lonely, violent man who fights dogs in a small Baja California town in the 1940s. Style-wise, it's a melange of Hemingway and Cormac McCarthy, stilted diction, odd punctuation and all. I read it when it first came out, and enjoyed it just as much this second time. Romantic and violent in equal parts (the dog fights are rough stuff) with some beautiful descriptive passages. Also put me in mind of Robert Stone at times, Graham Green at others. It's definitely "manly" material, which is out of fashion in certain circles, but, you know, fuck that.
Profile Image for Will Byrnes.
1,372 reviews121k followers
November 2, 2008
The narrator of this tale is a young man whose mother has just died. He is violent, urged on by the voice of his grandfather, a primitive. He is a murderer, a harsh uncaring soul eager to prove his strength at any cost. He is used by a woman to kill her lover, then flees to a remote part of Baja Mexico. It is there that the action of the tale ensues. Cancion is a sleepy place, but one in which the future is the prize in a war between a mafia-like developer and the anarcho-literary types who want to keep the place the way it is. He finds solace in his own company, but one day catches a glimpse of the don’s niece and is smitten. He becomes a dog fighter while there, putting his brutality to the test in a spectator sport in which men do battle with canines, sometimes animals that have been trained for viciousness. This is a role that matters in Cancion, where a dog-fighter is considered a sort of matador, a respected one. The novel is brutal. There is violence aplenty, and it is difficult to conjure too much empathy for this near-sociopath. But the harshness of the narrator’s life provides the dark background against which the rays of emerging humanity shine. He lives in a complex near a homosexual dentist, forms friendships with the town’s famous writer, teaches young men and begins to care about the town. He also falls in love. There is lyricism in the writing that enhances this journey. I would not recommend this to anyone of tender sensibility. But for those with a strong stomach, it was a worthwhile journey.
Profile Image for Hal Long.
8 reviews2 followers
October 3, 2013
If you like Cormac McCarthy, particularly the beauty of All the Pretty Horses and the violence of Blood Meridien, then this might be a good book for you. Simple, clean writing that invokes Hemingway, McCarthy and Faulkner. The style captivates and the characters are compelling. The violence runs high and it's definitely cruelty to animals (and humans). So, be prepared. But, once you get past that this is one of my favorites.
Profile Image for Jeff.
46 reviews18 followers
March 3, 2019
Bojanowski is an excellent writer and there is some poetic, beautiful language throughout! This is definitely a writer's story that thrives on poetic, concrete imagery and minimalistic prose. I honestly read this book for Bojanowski's writing style, and I'm happy to say that his style is consistent and effective until the very end!

Is it captivating to read? Yes! But the plot moves slowly and feels underwhelming in the end. It took me close to a year to finish reading this book because I lost interest; however, by the novel's close, the loose threads all tie together to sketch themes on generational sins, The American Dream, the absence of God, and misguided masculinity.

Overall, The Dog Fighter is an interesting story about a man's search for love, meaning, and permanence that moves at a slow, plodding pace. Ultimately, I liked where the narrative took me, but it took a long time to get there. And then, once I was there, it ended abruptly.


Profile Image for Justin Freeman.
Author 1 book10 followers
November 12, 2017
I picked this one up because many of the reviews mentioned that Bojanowski writes similarly to Cormac McCarthy with characters reminiscent of Hemingway’s. I couldn’t agree more and I loved every bit of it. Following the life of a Mexican boy through adolescence and into adulthood, The Dog Fighter delivers as a coming of age story and a tribute to the foolishness of young love with plenty of violence to spare.
1 review
March 29, 2018
The Dog Fighter was an exceptional book. A great first novel. The secrecy of the narrator and leaves you begging for more information. Id fully recommend this book to anyone interested in a story with violence, but also self realization, and questioning.
Profile Image for Véra.
64 reviews1 follower
December 4, 2024
Hemingway and McCarthy meets Palahniuk. It's been 20 years since I read this but I still think about it sometimes. Uniquely violent and abhorrent, this type of "manly" fiction never really sat well with me.
Profile Image for RGS.
4 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2017
I liked it a lot...intense with a main character to care about...not for the faint of heart...Like other readers...I'd compare it to a Cormac McCarthy border novel...
3 reviews
March 3, 2025
Broke my heart. Loved the language. Amazing imagery.
Profile Image for David.
32 reviews13 followers
April 14, 2009
Though this book can be stylistically mannered, eschewing commas for example, it was entertaining and pleasurable to read. I enjoyed being fully immersed in the author's macho, emphatic language and living in the scarred and caloused skin of the main character. I chose to interpret the storytelling and setting as mythic rather than documentary. As far as realism goes, my more Latin culture-savy friends felt that The Dog Fighter misrepresented Mexico, even to the point of racism. It certainly is a brutal, bloody life in the small town on the Sea of Cortes which is in fact the setting of this noirish tale about a little Cesar who excels in the eponymous passtime. Highly recommended, but not for everyone; content warning: extreme animal violence.
I met Mr. Bojanowski at Cody's Books (god rest its soul) at the time this was first published. He was a very serious and intelligent fellow, but he seemed beset by the work of publicizing his novel, and would've clearly rather been 'round the corner with a pint than standing reading excerpts in front of 15 complete strangers seated on folding chairs.
Don't know what Marc is up to now, we all wish him the best of luck developing his talent.
Profile Image for Martin.
38 reviews22 followers
December 31, 2007
I put this book down several times to gather dust before I finally willed my way through it. I'm not a person put off by violence and love books and movies that drip with it. Blood and gore in copious amounts is surely my forte and this book is jam packed with it; think Fight Club with dogs.

To be honest I can't really nail down one reason I didn't love this book. The main character never really gets any where. He doesn't seem to learn anything. His internal struggles stay in park and the story outside of the actual dog fighting seemed to leave me wanting. I couldn't tell if I was going to end up feeling sorry for the main character, loving him, hating him and before I knew it the book ended.

Shrugging off my need to feel fullfilled at the end of every book I read, the story is ok, the setting is kind of cool and the blood splattering seems to step in just in time to drag the story along for a few more pages.

Maybe Michael Vick can help me understand exactly what it is I am missing from this book?
Profile Image for Frank.
188 reviews1 follower
May 12, 2007
I generally feel that, in a work of fiction, messing with things like structure and getting creative with punctuation are a waste of a good writer's craft. It doesn't matter how clever you get with these, what matters is solid things like story, character, perspective, and the general arc of the story. I felt this way when I started reading this book. It wasn't until I was nearly done with it that it struck me how much of the chosen grammatical structure of the work contributed to it. It certainly adds to the voice of the narrator, which is the main drive of the book--the narrator and his voice. It has good character, plot, and a very unique perspective. It's all a kind of poetry, really. One of those books you don't know how much you will enjoy when you start reading it, but you find you never put it down for long. It's a good book.
Author 32 books106 followers
October 4, 2008
The Dog Fighter (Perennial, 2004) takes some getting used to. In a counterintuitive move, Marc Bojanowski’s debut novel contains the bare minimum as far as punctuation is concerned. You will find no quotation marks, commas, dashes, colons, semicolons, ellipsis, or any other helpful forms of punctuation. Instead, aside from marks native to the Spanish language (accents, etc.), you will only be given words, periods, and question marks. Does that make for a clunky, awkward reading experience at first? You bet....

Read the rest in the December 2006 issue of decomP .
Profile Image for Tara B.
40 reviews1 follower
April 27, 2008
First off, there isn't really war in the political sense, but there is war in this book, so the shelf classification stands.

For a first novel, this is brilliant. The story takes a lot of interesting turns. A lot of people have griped that the protagonist doesn't really evolve, doesn't "go anywhere," and for those people I have one word: Hemingway. This book is way Hemingway-esque. If you don't like the guy, why did you open a book that has his name on the cover? (It's a quote from a critic.)

I don't like writing reviews much, so in summary: If you like Hemingway, you'll probably like this. If you like books that have a lot of violence, or books that have a lot of imagery of Mexico, give this book a try.
11 reviews
September 10, 2009
Shocking tale that doesn't apologize for its disposition and lays it out flat. Grabs you from the first chapter til the last with no holds barred...if you are a dog lover do not read this book !

This is just a precursor to what you are going to encounter with this book... as it bares your own account and how you will digest it. The dogfighter tries to find his manhood in bravery and wrestles with newfound love as only a dogfighter can... Its a wretched story with a painful love song playing in the background..

On the flip side it is culturally beautiful and the pictures are painted vividly ...the bright flowers along with the smell of the splattered blood in this roller coaster of a read.

Profile Image for Garrett Mcgeein.
6 reviews
June 4, 2012
Seldom have I read a book where the all the characters were so likeable. Through all the betrayals, friendships, and story developments, all the personalities in the novel won my favor; till the last page, I even enjoyed what I suppose would be called 'the villain...' though, those classical distinctions were anything but clear - all the characters were at times villainous or heroic, respectively.

The book's stylistic grammar was also a fresh change of pace; though, admittedly, at times confusing. Instead of using traditional punctuation, the author opted to use - from what I can tell - nothing more that periods throughout the entire short book.

I could barely put this book down.

Profile Image for Andrew.
8 reviews2 followers
May 2, 2008
This book surprised me. I'm not sure what exactly I was expecting, but this was a really good book. I'm not sure if it was the relatively sparse dialogue or the way the author describes everything, but more than any book I've read in a while every time I opened it it was like taking a little vacation. Spending some time in a quiet little town in Baja. The protagonist is intentionally despicable throughout the beginning of the book, but he grows on you. The ending was unexpected and perfect, with no apologies. I liked this one quite a bit.
Profile Image for Jess Genevieve.
3 reviews2 followers
May 6, 2012
From the very beginning the dark tones and violence made me question whether I'd put the book down and never pick it back up. The characters and the landscape of Cancion were what kept me captivated. The protagonist's journey takes the reader through friendship, love, greed, lust and betrayal. The ending was not at all what I expected and I have to admit I'm pretending things happened differently.
23 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2007
brutal, raw, visceral (literally and figuratively),graceful in its violence, somehow nostalgic. hemingwayesque in structure and device. debut novel, always an attractive quality- interesting to glimpse and speculate on a young writer's motivations. wish i had the onions to live as the anonymous narrator.
Profile Image for Cormac Mccarthy.
3 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2008
This book is both beautiful and brutal. Surreal and terrifyingly real. Only a writer with the rarest of gifts could create a main character and give him no name, set the story in 1940's Mexico, and have the reader completely invested from page one.
38 reviews1 follower
August 31, 2010
Bojanowski effectively transports the reader to another time and place, and into the mind of a character most people are never likely to encounter. This book is as much about change as it is about violence, and sometimes change is violent.
Profile Image for Christopher.
38 reviews1 follower
Read
September 17, 2020
Once I caught the flow (punctuation irregularities), I was enamored with this tale.
Profile Image for Angie.
465 reviews8 followers
February 22, 2008
One of those great finds where I thought the cover looked interesting at the library so i picked it up. An amazing story.
1 review
June 9, 2008

Not bad, picked it up on a whim. Funny how books can turn into a love story of sorts. So it goes.
27 reviews
January 5, 2009
A beautifully written book even though it is difficult to read at times because of the subject matter it's absolutely worth it.
Profile Image for Steve.
11 reviews1 follower
August 26, 2010
An epic poem about desire and violence. Heady and rich.
Profile Image for Eric.
97 reviews6 followers
March 31, 2011
Man this is a hard charger for fans of Cormac McCarthy and the likes. Violent, passionate, poetic...good. I did not want to have to put this book down.
Profile Image for Rose.
181 reviews1 follower
July 27, 2011
I didn't like this book until I was about 50 pages in. I think it;s a good book for a book club, plenty to discuss and leaves you with a few things to think about.
1 review
February 21, 2012
This was an interesting story and worth the read but I don't know if it's something I would want to read again.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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