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El rey siempre está por encima del pueblo

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Las historias de unos personajes que intentan luchar contra el poder en cualquiera de sus formas y que confirman a Daniel Alarc�n como uno de los m�s destacados narradores contempor�neos.

El rey siempre est� por encima del pueblo recoge las historias de una serie de personajes cuyas vidas carecen de hero�smo. Y sin embargo, en todas ellas vibran, soterradas, la violencia y la voluntad de rebeli�n ante una figura paterna o paternalista, hacia el poder en cualquiera de sus formas.

Un ni�o es obligado por su padre a ejercer de lazarillo de un mendigo ciego y codicioso, hombres y mujeres construyen en una noche hist�rica su lugar en el mundo, un vibrador decide el destino amoroso de una pareja, un homosexual recuerda sus amores con el presidente Lincoln...

Rese�as:

�El talento y la sabidur�a de Alarc�n est�n por encima de su tiempo.�.-The New York Times Book Review

�Leer a Alarc�n es como presenciar la llegada de un nuevo John Steinbeck o un Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez.�.-Star-Tribune

ENGLISH DESCRIPTION

LONGLISTED for the 2017 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION

An urgent, essential collection of stories about immigration, broken dreams, Los Angeles gang members, Latin American families, and other tales of high stakes journeys, from the award-winning author of War by Candlelight and At Night We Walk in Circles.

Migration. Betrayal. Family secrets. Doomed love. Uncertain futures. In Daniel Alarc�n's hands, these are transformed into deeply human stories with high stakes. In "The Thousands," people are on the move and forging new paths; hope and heartbreak abound. A man deals with the fallout of his blind relatives' mysterious deaths and his father's mental breakdown and incarceration in "The Bridge." A gang member discovers a way to forgiveness and redemption through the haze of violence and trauma in "The Ballad of Rocky Rontal." And in the tour de force novella, "The Auroras," a man severs himself from his old life and seeks to make a new one in a new city, only to find himself seduced and controlled by a powerful woman. Richly drawn, full of unforgettable characters, The King is Always Above the People reveals experiences both unsettling and unknown, and yet eerily familiar in this new world.

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 2, 2009

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About the author

Daniel Alarcón

47 books438 followers
Daniel Alarcón’s fiction and nonfiction have been published in The New Yorker, Harper's, Virginia Quarterly Review, Salon, Eyeshot and elsewhere. He is Associate Editor of Etiqueta Negra, an award-winning monthly magazine based in his native Lima, Peru. His story collection, War by Candlelight, was a finalist for the 2006 PEN/Hemingway Foundation Award, and the British journal Granta recently named him one of the Best Young American Novelists. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including a Fulbright Scholarship (2001), a Whiting Award (2004), and a Guggenheim Fellowship (2007). He lives in Oakland, California, and his first novel Lost City Radio was published in February 2007.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 198 reviews
Profile Image for Carol.
341 reviews1,217 followers
January 23, 2018
I rarely read short story collections and I'd not heard of Daniel Alarcon prior to checking this book out of the library. Was it the cover? The title? It's certainly not that I don't have plenty of books to read that I'm excited to read. And still. The wonder of libraries.

I knew in the first seventy-five pages that this would be on my "top 10 reads of 2018" list, no matter what the rest of the year holds, because of passages like this:

Geography is an accident, he said. The place you are born is simply the first place you flee. And then: the people you meet, the ones you fall for, and the paths you make together, the entirety of one's life, a series of mere accidents. And these too are accidents: the creeks you stumble upon in a dense wood, the stones you gather, the number of times each skips across the bright surface of the water, and everything you feel in that moment: the graceless passage of time, the possibility of stillness.

and this:

This town brought up bad memories for my father, who was, in those days, entering a pensive late middle-age. That was how it seemed to me at the time; but what does a twenty-two-year-old know about a grown man's life and worries? Very little, of course. I was too young to recognize what would later seem more than obvious, that I was the greatest source of my old man's concern. That, if he was growing old too soon, I was at least partly to blame. This would've been clear had I been paying attention. We hadn't come to see about Raul or his house or his things. We'd come to see about me.

and then this:

The registrar was a small, very round man named Juan, with dark skin and a raspy voice. He'd been my father's best friend in third grade, or so he claimed. My old man didn't bother to contradict him, only smiled in such a way that I understood it to be untrue; or if not untrue exactly, then one of those statements that time had rendered unverifiable, and about which there was no longer any use debating.

and, finally, this:

The town itself was interesting enough, with crumbling houses and narrow streets full of people who seemed not to know how to hurry. I learned to walk slowly and so this pace was not difficult for me. That day was absurdly sunny. In the afternoon I rode one of the funiculars to the top of a hill, an outcropping of rock high above the sea where the wind blew so hard it forced my eyes to shut and dusted my face with a fine film. From there, between gusts, I could see the port, its gleaming metal claws, its workers scurrying between acres of containers stacked one on top of the other. Beyond it was the ocean, a beautiful, roiling sheet of silver.
Of course, the real work of the day was pretending I wasn't lonely.


Alarcon's protagonists are men going places. Something happened. They are returning home for a funeral, or have left home some time ago and are still in the process of determining what comes next. They are in their 20s - 40s and a little bit lost. Things haven't worked out as they might have thought. Family is difficult. So is marriage. They seek freedom. A new set of options. The ability to escape the past. To fit within a community but not be locked in by it. To be free of loneliness.

Alarcón is 40, but he notices tells and the nuances of behavior and relationships as if he was born an old soul. Originally from Peru, he was raised in suburban Birmingham, Alabama. Somewhere along the way, he became a wicked observer of human behavior with writing talent to spare. His stories will appeal to anyone who is a fan of Mohsin Hamid, and also to the many who find Hamid's writing too lightweight.

The standouts were The Thousands, Abraham Lincoln Has Been Shot, Republica and Grau, The Bridge and The Lord Rides a Swift Cloud. If you only have time for a single story - read Abraham Lincoln Has Been Shot. You're welcome.
Profile Image for Trish.
1,422 reviews2,711 followers
July 12, 2018
One assumes from the title that the king spoken of is revered and placed in a position of honor. Very shortly we learn that the king is actually hanging by his neck, above the central square, the people looking up at him swinging there. Many things are different from the perspective of those on the flip side of north.

Alarcón is Peruvian-American, and his voice is strong (having seen poverty), male (having known brutality), and distinctive (not being North American). His biography is fascinating. He is an investigative journalist; he teaches both broadcast journalism and writes novels. He collaborated with partners to establish a Spanish-language podcast, Radio Ambulante , telling Latin American stories for NPR.

This collection of stories may be a perfect way to be introduced to his work. Some stories have a knife hidden somewhere in the folds. We are reading along, interested and engaged, and suddenly we remember the world is not kind. We might have moments of carefree pleasure but it is not too long before the reality comes flooding back. Until then, however, there is a sense of release most intense.

“The Provincials” is the longest story and it is something altogether new. A father and his son return to the town the father had fled some years before. He is now working at a job unimaginable to those people in the town—Head Librarian of the Rare and Antiquarian Manuscripts division of the National Library—and has one son in America. The son traveling with him is an actor. Because the townspeople mistake him for his cross-border brother, he accedes to this role. He discovers there is, in fact, something of value here in this tired town they’ve left.

“República and Grau” may be my favorite story, a story of a wily blind man begging for coins. He is accompanied by a ten-year-old who is being pimped by his father to bring home half the take. Life is hard. The begging blind man seems happy to share his income, such as it is, with the neatly-dressed boy. One day, after his father beats the boy for such a small take-home, the boy’s bruised, bloody face and uncaring demeanor earns the two beggars more.

The second-longest story in the bunch, “The Bridge,” is as filling as a novel. There is so much to think about, so much alluded to, so much desire and despair in it that one has to pause, and pull in the oars. Let’s just think about what he is saying, if you don’t mind. It won’t hurt you to know the story ends with a recording of an audience roaring back at an opera performer who left them momentarily speechless.

In the best of all possible worlds, I would read this collection slowly, allowing time between stories as though each were a square of bitter chocolate. But I am a traveler, too, and fear I will lose the opportunity to share in this strongly South American-flavored story-telling so must finish it quickly. All the way through we sense the movement of individuals, tied in some mysterious psychic way to the mother country but mostly adrift, seeking rest. The North, when it is perceived at all, is “other.”

The final story, “The Auroras,” couldn’t have come at a more opportune moment, considering the state of discussion around the world on the subject of sexual relations and exploitation. The story pained me. While we experience a curious role-reversal in the sexual arena, we also have a queer example of the effect of social groups on attitudes…something like the Facebook effect. The main character was influenced to find his inner malice and express it, only later understanding how thoroughly he’d been manipulated. It was a distressing story to end on.

Alarcón is interesting enough that I set out immediately to see if this set of stories is representative of his work. He has two earlier novels, his debut called Lost City Radio (2007) about a radio show that recounts for families the status of victims of a war in a nameless South American country, and At Night We Walk in Circles (2013) featuring people with names and backgrounds the same as those in his story mentioned above called “The Provincials.”

But there is more. Alarcón collaborated on a graphic novel and several story collections. He is a journalist, and just kind of endlessly fascinating. He appears to write in English: no translator is listed. He also teaches or has taught at several universities in the United States. You must sample his work if only because South American writers are too scarce—for whatever reason—in North America, and I presume, in Europe. South America is simply too often overlooked in our hurry to discover larger targets or exotica.
Profile Image for Monica.
780 reviews691 followers
May 28, 2021
So…Daniel Alarcon. This young man has taken the literary world by storm with this collection of stories. I have become a huge fan short story collections. These stories are fascinating, well crafted, interesting and odd. This is my wheelhouse and Alarcon is very talented writer with a new and different perspective. Alarcon writes about men of color of Latin descent. I don't read often enough about how men of color view the world and themselves. That said, it seems as if the collection only has one voice. Honestly each story could have been about the same person at different points in his life. The circumstances varied but the emotional resonances were very similar. Basically these are stories of men who are disillusioned with their place in the world. And they are all dissatisfied or restless or uncomfortable about something in their lives. It's kind of an open spicket of discontent and missed opportunity. The dice have been rolled and they came up snake eyes. I need to believe that there is more for these men than the bitterness and melancholy presented here.



I've read a few short story collections and what usually varies about them is the atmosphere, the temperature, the texture. Often times different stories reach for different emotions. Tugs on different parts of the heart. This book was very emotionally focused on nostalgia, regrets, selfishness, hubris, conceit, entitlement, callousness and a strange self-awareness in the midst of self-absorption. There is (a mostly unstated) acknowledgement that things could be better if these men were better people. All of this assessing and a touch of self-pity makes for a lyrical yet slightly unpalatable experience. Beautifully written, poignant and gloomy. The standouts for me were The Provencials, Republica and Grau, The Bridge and The Auroras. Reminiscent of Toni Morrison, and Jesmyn Ward, reading Alarcon is a brilliant, unsettling and craggy experience.

4ish Stars

Read on kindle.
Profile Image for David.
744 reviews3 followers
June 27, 2018
It is unfortunate that these stories are collected. Individually some show promise, but there is a sameness to many of them and so they are less powerful gathered together. Here are four opening lines:

"It was the year I left my parents, a few useless friends, and a girl who liked to tell everyone we were married, and moved two hundred kilometers downstream to the capitol."

"I'd been out of the conservatory for about a year when my great-uncle Raul died."

"I'd been in Lima for the first half of the year."

It's early March when Hernan arrives in the port city."

Ho hum. All are solid sentences and perfectly good ways to start a short story, but taken in succession they become formulaic and workaday. The same is true for the stories themselves with their common themes, similar settings, and overlapping tones. And so I found this to be a thoroughly mediocre undertaking.
Profile Image for Fran Becker.
46 reviews
July 30, 2018
I don't usually read short story collections. I feel that as soon as I get to know a character the story is over and I feel vaguely unsatisfied.

But a couple of these stories were brilliant. I chose this book because much of it took place in Peru, part of a World Cup reading challenge - read 32 books representing the 32 countries competing in the World Cup. I was not disappointed. I can't say I learned all that much about Peru, but these stories explore the human heart and relationships: lovers, fathers, and sons, with intimacy and grace.

Well worth the time, especially the final, longer story, The Auroras. It left me breathless. And very sad.
Profile Image for jeremy.
1,202 reviews309 followers
October 7, 2017
life has a way of punishing brave boys like you. life has a way of making brave boys like you punish themselves. particularly here. where you live. you already know that.
daniel alarcón's writing seems to become tighter and more focused with each passing book. always a gifted storyteller, a notable poise or confidence now permeates his pages, whereas before it came but in passing phases. the first story collection since his pen/hemingway-nominated debut, war by candlelight, his new one, the king is always above the people, features 10 stories (9 and a novella? 8 and 2?), each tinged with a certain yearning or desperate/despairing reality to them. the collections longest pieces, "the auroras," "the provincials," and the title story stand the tallest.

of the original bogotá39 list (a new one was celebrated earlier this year), only junot díaz has enjoyed greater stateside success than alarcón (though both are in otherwise exceptional company). melding the political and the personal, or at least acknowledging that the twain seldom exist separately, the peruvian-american's sweet spot seems to be the place where his characters seek to transcend the limits of one, while forever being encumbered by the other. the king is always above the people is a solid collection, with nary a weak story to be found.
but still, hernán didn't leave. people far better than him in every way have skated to their graves stuck in bad relationships, such is the coercive power of intertia.
Profile Image for Doug.
2,548 reviews914 followers
January 14, 2018
I really liked Alarcón's last novel, which I gave a 5 star rating, so am rather surprised and disappointed that I found this NBA nominated follow up so utterly lacking. Partially this MIGHT be due to my antipathy towards the short story format, but mainly I just found these ten brief works to be dull and uninteresting, and while competently written, rarely surpassing that adjective. Seven of the stories are very short, and these just never seem to gain any momentum before they are over. (One of these inexplicably takes place in the present day, but is narrated by President Lincoln's gay lover - and just seems bizarre for the sake of being bizarre). The three longer stories have the opposite problem - they drone on and on with things happening, but rarely with any discernible point.
Profile Image for Mel.
725 reviews53 followers
January 10, 2018
This was just ok. The writing itself is exceptional, and overreaching. It demanded more of myself than I could invest- it was like the style itself wanted to prevent the stories from really being known. There were several moments where I lost the thread of what was going on and didn't care to pick it up again.
896 reviews1 follower
November 25, 2017
There are some decent as well as funny stories in this collection. Unfortunately I listened to the audiobook and Dos Santos became so excited so often that his voice started becoming background noise and I would tune out. I owe it to this author to read the hard copy of this book and write another review in the future.
Profile Image for Audacia Ray.
Author 16 books271 followers
December 11, 2017
As I read these stories about men and boys doing fucked up things, I kept wondering: are these stories about toxic masculinity or an embodiment of toxic masculinity? I don’t know that I found the answer exactly but I wasn’t into it.
3,539 reviews181 followers
June 28, 2024
(Revised for spelling and grammar and overall readability - June 2024).

There is something wonderful in discovering a new writer who leaves you gob-smacked with pleasure and amazement and although you want everyone to know of your discovery, it is also something very private and personal. Needless to say these stories by Daniel Alarcon are, for me, such a discovery. That I am years behind others in discovering Daniel Alarcon and this collection of stories changes neither the the importance, for me, of the experience nor my pleasure in the experience of discovering Alarcon and his wonderful stories.

I don't know what to say about these stories except to insist that they need to be read by everyone who loves good writing. I really was moved by this wonderful book. If you haven't read any book by Alacorn then read this. If you have read everything else by him I would still insist you read this collection of stories.
Profile Image for Deacon Tom (Feeling Better).
2,635 reviews245 followers
June 7, 2022
Enjoyable

I have to admit I am not a big short story fan because I relate to some stories and not others. This is exactly what happened in this book; some were powerful and others a bit of a snore.

Overall, the writing was good.
Profile Image for Dan.
Author 21 books547 followers
October 31, 2017
Daniel Alarcón is one of my favorite contemporary writers. I know him mostly from his novels and his work on the radio show Radio Ambulante. This is the first of his short story collections that I've read and it met with my expectations.

The stories are all free standing, yet a current of restless individualism animates them all. Most of the stories concern themselves with a young man, kinda single kinda not, who's arrived at a crucial juncture in his life. Does he do what's expected of him or does he choose a different, unknown path? Alarcón explores both possibilities throughout the collection, and, as you might expect, avoids pat resolutions. Both paths are fraught for his protagonists, suggesting that happiness (or at least a sense of contentment and purpose) must ultimately be achieved internally, irrespective of the external circumstances.

The sea and the city are used as enduring metaphors throughout the collection as is, to a lesser degree, the United States. I liked how in each case, these places represent a kind of guarded Utopia for Alarcón's protagonists, yet very little in the stories themselves suggests that any of these places — the sea, the city, the US — can bear the brunt of a Utopian imaginary for long. And the characters seem to know it. In a way, Alarcón vision is bleak here, but it's also beautiful.

A subtly political, unfailingly human collection rendered in sparse prose. Perfect for fans of Viet Thahn Nguyen's The Refugees.

If you liked this, make sure to follow me on Goodreads for more reviews!
Profile Image for Amy.
23 reviews20 followers
January 28, 2018
The two star rating is because the first half of the book is closer to three stars for me, and the second half closer to one. There are several longer stories (closer to novellas, really) and a spattering of shorter stories. I tended to prefer the shorter ones, because they packed an actual punch. The longer stories all seemed too long, but at the same time their endings were more the story dribbling away than conclusions in any of the way endings can be satisfying. The writing itself could be quite evocative, but it fall flat in service to some of the more insipid stories.

I think I would recommend a break between each story. Some of the similarities got a bit monotonous. For example, although all of the stories have a Latin America vibe, pretty much all of them take place in an unidentified city, and multiple stories involve settling the estate of a family member.

This is also very much a male book. That doesn't necessarily mean that women can't enjoy it, but the male gaze is omnipresent. It isn't just that all of the narrators and most of the main characters are men. It is that the male characters have some depth and complexity, while the women are either flat characters, filler material, or mere objects of sexual desire. At times the writing displays some discomfort with this, but never enough to actually allow any of the women to be fully human. I can see some men seeing themselves in the male characters, but can't visualize many women recognizing themselves in many of the women portrayed here.
Profile Image for Anna Baillie-Karas.
497 reviews63 followers
May 31, 2018
A strong collection of short stories. Alarcón is Peruvian-American (but has lived in many cities) & I loved the direct style but sense of South American place and life (of the men, mainly). Some stories are set in Lima & others in unnamed cities - but the way of life is conveyed in simple details: the old men sitting on benches who never left; the emigrants who return. Not great women characters but intelligent, thought-provoking stories.
Profile Image for Chrysten Lofton.
441 reviews36 followers
May 8, 2019
5.⭐ “No one had ever asked Maico such a thing. In fact, it wouldn’t have occurred to him that a question like that could even be asked. Describe himself.”

**spoilers**


If you’re following my reviews, thanks for rolling with me ♡

We’re on season four of Stitcher’s LeVar Burton Reads, and we’re gifted with "Republica and Grau” by Daniel Alarcón.

description

My first impression was that I’d missed something. The author is giving us zero internal dialogue and I'm not used to that. We have to read these actions and surmise the internal struggle. I kind of love it though. I love the subtlety, the author not forcing me into their idea of the point or moral. The action is telling us everything we need to know.

I love too that LeVar immediately closes the story with prediction and speculation because it coached me toward the point. The speculation is the device that spins that moment of confusion into that Aha! realization. And then I began to take it apart myself. I started thinking about the abuse I experienced growing up.

Many abused kids have this third person complex like we see in Maiko. He spends most of his own story as a spectator except for a few exceptions.

First, Maiko bows to the benefactors after he sees the blind man do it. No one told him to do that, he just picked it up. This is interesting because I think it’s partially that third person complex. This kid is conditioned to perform perfectly or else. He doesn't use his own gesture, he copies the one he sees. That's upsetting, but it's also a testament to his ability to learn.

Then there’s the climactic moment where he takes action of his own accord, truly expressing himself. This is like a double-edged sword to me. On one hand, I agree with LeVar. Maiko shifts from a third-person to first-person. He understands himself outside of others, and understands the agendas and motivations of others, finally.

The fucked up part is that this is Maiko’s language now. He could have robbed the man, taken the last of the money and brought it to his mother. He could have split the money and quit, he could’ve told the blind man off, insisted on his apology. Instead, he decides to make a brutal statement.

It was a seizure of power in the only language he knew. Abuse.

He filled the man’s tin just to knock it out of his hands and leave him deserted in traffic.

After being belittled and beaten, people (especially children) may become invisible ciphers. I’m glad to see Maiko break out of that empty, ghostly heteronomy. I’m just not so sure it’s all for good. He gave up money because his new currency was power, and that’s got mixed potential.

Thanks for reading, and If you wanna chat about the latest LBR episodes, hit me up in the comments and come meet with us at LeVar Burton Reads: The Community on Facebook.

- 📚☕♥
Profile Image for José Vivas M..
229 reviews14 followers
November 11, 2013
Qué vaina más loca estos cuentos. Tal vez puedo pasar "El Puente" y "Los miles" como del tipo de relato que entiendo/siento/disfruto. Los demás me dejaron desconcertado, tal vez por su sofisticación, no sé si por un nivel de experimentación que me pierde, quizá por una estructura demasiado extraña para mí. Debí sospecharlo por las revistas en las que ha publicado Alarcón, de marcada tendencia hacia la narración "de avanzada".
Compré el libro emocionado por leer algo más del autor de "Radio Ciudad Perdida", novela que me gustó mucho (y de cuya lectura, a la luz de estos cuentos, confieso recordar una vaga sensación de desconcierto al inicio), pero no me rindo. Tal vez encuentre en otra de sus obras el registro con el que conecté en "Radio...". Tal vez aprenda a leer en la clave de estos novísimos y laureados escritores.
110 reviews
May 31, 2018
Solid work of short stories but nothing incredible. Alarcon definitely fleshes out the worlds with his little descriptions and tells interesting peculiar tales. For me, there was a certain lack of purpose to the stories, maybe this is part of Alarcon's training as a journalist, having a comfort with leaving things open ended. It often felt like stories were simply being recounted instead of building to a greater theme. The pacing of the book also feels incredibly slow, Alarcon focuses on many small details and day to day life stuff that simply isn't that interesting or important. My favorite stories were The Auroras and The King is Always above the people because I think they should most clearly and most relatable Alarcon's employment of a lost young man searching for purpose and meaning through a physical journey which often ends perilously.
Profile Image for Gwendolyn.
936 reviews43 followers
June 5, 2018
I enjoyed this imaginative and versatile story collection. Alarcon explores issues of immigration, displacement, and powerlessness. The male characters, in particular, are well-drawn and complex individuals. (Small complaint: the female characters tend towards stereotypes.) Some of the stories include fantastical elements, so be prepared for that. The final story in the collection is really a novella, and it was my favorite.
Profile Image for Elena.
59 reviews
August 16, 2017
The King is Always Above the People further solidified Daniel Alarcon as one of my favorite authors.
Profile Image for Elizabeth☮ .
1,818 reviews14 followers
dnf
January 1, 2018
This started out promising and then fizzled. Just when I thought it was gaining momentum, I fell asleep several times trying to get through one of the longer stories. Time to move on.
Profile Image for Karin.
1,492 reviews55 followers
April 12, 2018
There were a couple of stories I liked--but most of them I felt just had no point. Flat characters. Rounding up a star for the inspired narration.
Profile Image for Siobhan Ward.
1,906 reviews12 followers
April 6, 2021
This was a solid collection of short stories. I liked the variety of stories and characters, and particularly liked the titular story. There were some stories I struggled with more than others, simply due to format or the plot, but that's pretty typical in one of these collections.

I'm not sure if I'd read another short story collection by Alarcón, but I'd definitely be interested in a full-length novel. His characters are interesting and reading a longer story with more character development would be cool.
Profile Image for Kim Lockhart.
1,233 reviews194 followers
October 4, 2020
I'm not sure what I'm missing in most of these stories, but I found them to be less than satisfying. "The Bridge" seemed to shine above all the others, but that was the lone standout novella, IMHO.
Profile Image for Bejoy Mathew.
84 reviews15 followers
January 13, 2023
Alright, so there were a couple of good stories in this collection, but most of them I didn't like very much. The Provincials is one of my favorites from the lot and probably one of the best short stories I have ever read. For this reason, I give it 4 stars.
Profile Image for Andrea.
1,371 reviews36 followers
March 31, 2025
Several years ago (2018) I saw Daniel Alarcón in conversation at City Arts and Lectures and was impressed, bought his books, and now here we are 7 years later and I've just gotten to one of them.

Short stories can be tricky and I'm not sure he sticks the landing on all of these but I did enjoy them. Many of them have a spare feeling, or like the characters have walked onto a set. Overall more hits than misses.

Recommend.
Profile Image for Matt C.
6 reviews
May 13, 2020
There are a few stand out stories in here while others seem to have the same themes but executed less impressively. The entire collection feels like it takes place in the same city, which I really enjoyed. Some of the stories are very hard to decipher but overall it was an enjoyable collection
Profile Image for Alexis.
124 reviews1 follower
May 21, 2018
A book of short stories. Some I enjoyed, some not as much. Many I read with a strong hope for something better for everyone in the end. Stories set in seemingly familiar places, some places with which I’m sure the author is well-acquainted. Stories of moments of reckless indulging and depressed passion and lots of sadness. And use. Relationships between people that broke my heart. But also culture and pride in culture and love for families, even dysfunctional ones with disordered love. I’m glad I got to hear this author read and speak at my University this past year and that I got to read this book.

Some of my favorites from this book:

“True authenticity, I’d decided, required an absolute, nearly spiritual denial of the audience, or even of the possibility of being watched” (“The Provincials” Daniel Alarcón)

“Grown men with hurt feelings are awkward creatures; grown men who feel dimly they have done something wrong are positively opaque” (“The Provincials” Daniel Alarcón)

“They are young, privileged, and jaded, genetically engineered to be unimpressed by Hernán or anyone else over thirty” (“The Auroras Daniel Alarcón)

“He was falling in love, in the profoundly selfish way men often do” (“The Auroras” Daniel Alarcón)

“None of it was untrue per se, only magnified. It had become a story they told to reassure themselves” (“The Auroras” Daniel Alarcón)

“There’s a heaviness to his gestures, a certain hopelessness” (“The Auroras” Daniel Alarcón)
Profile Image for bianca .
170 reviews3 followers
February 22, 2018
Good book of short stories. some main observations:
-This was the first book by a male author I’ve read in a while and it is so, so, so clear that the author is a dude. Mainly because all of the women in the book lack depth, are presented for characters to ogle at or for their entertainment, and are not focal (with the exception of the last story, though even Clarisa lacked true depth) at all. I accepted it as a piece of this book but was disappointed that Alarcón didn’t do more.
-A lot of the stories felt empty or spacious. This isn’t a bad thing: I think it highlighted the anxiety tied to the city or provincial landscape that the characters felt. The whole landscape isn’t rich or filled because the characters are desperately trying to figure things out and haven’t found answers yet. l
-The stories about father son relationships were the most interesting. The commentary on how migration (to urban centers and presumably to the US) had decimated towns was interesting as well, and well described. (Pretty sure this is the sly political tone the synopsis refers to..)

I would recommend this book to someone wanting a quick read, a Latin American vibe, and a somber tone.
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