Roberto Bolaño’s 2666 contains a repeated image of a void, pit, or hole, which appears to characters in their dreams in various guises. The critic Pelletier dreams of bathers leaving a beach an… more →
Good Readingsgoodreadings wrote 3 hours ago: Roberto Bolaño’s 2666 contains a repeated image of a void, pit, or hole, which appears to cha … more →
goodreadings wrote 2 days ago: Those familiar with the work of Roberto Bolaño will not be surprised to hear that numerous writers, … more →
ed biblioklept wrote 3 days ago: I give up. I don’t know how to review The Savage Detectives. Everyone told me I was supposed … more →
bibliosaur wrote 4 days ago: I need this!! oh, lover, i've been waiting for you FINALLY! (http://us.macmillan.com/2666 ) … more →
karlo mikhail wrote 6 days ago: 1. I took it upon myself to read at least one tale by Chekhov or Maupassant every day. I downloaded … more →
goodreadings wrote 6 days ago: 2666 by Roberto Bolaño My review of Roberto Bolaño’s monumental posthumous novel 2666 should … more →
eÆsthete wrote 6 days ago: For the true cocktail swilling savant, you needn’t read any further than New York magazine … more →
Weston Cutter wrote 1 week ago: Apologies for the quiet: I’ve been inundated with reading lately, which has been (of course … more →
eÆsthete wrote 1 week ago: How does one capture the extraordinary worthiness of 2666, a masterwork written by the late Chilean- … more →
eamonnmcdonagh wrote 1 week ago: “2666″ is as consummate a performance as any 900-page novel dare hope to be: Bolaño won … more →
sjuonlinenews wrote 4 weeks ago: On November 10 the last great novel man will ever write will be published in English. What do you … more →
flymellon wrote 4 months ago: Section Four of 2666 is incredibly dark. The Sonora murders, herein referred to as the Santa Teres … more →