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Horacio Vázquez-Rial (1947–2012)

Author of Triste's History

44+ Works 168 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Horacio Vázquez-Rial

Triste's History (1987) 34 copies, 2 reviews
Frontera Sur (1901) 12 copies, 1 review
Las leyes del pasado (2000) 8 copies
La libertad de Italia (1987) 7 copies
El camino del norte (2006) 6 copies
Tango, der dein Herz verbrennt (2005) 6 copies, 1 review
Territorios vigilados (1988) 5 copies
Santiago de Liniers (2012) 4 copies
El viaje español (1985) 3 copies

Associated Works

The Pearl (1947) — Translator, some editions — 15,163 copies, 238 reviews
Tobacco Road (1932) — Translator, some editions — 1,708 copies, 58 reviews
A Lickpenny Lover and Other Stories (1991) — Introduction — 5 copies, 1 review
El Faro (Spanish Edition) (1997) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Vázquez-Rial, Horacio
Birthdate
1947-03-20
Date of death
2012-09-06
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
novelist
translator
Awards and honors
Premio Nadal (1987|Historia del triste)
Nationality
Argentina (birth)
Spain
Birthplace
Argentina
Places of residence
Barcelona, Spain
Madrid, Spain
Place of death
Madrid, Spain
Map Location
Argentina

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Cristobal Artola, known by all as Triste, loved by none except his washerwoman mother, was doomed to a Darwinian existence from birth:

...from the start Triste knew he was up against a stone wall whose polished surface made it impossible even to sink his teeth and claws into it, to cut himself on it while hauling himself up just a few inches, to clutch at the trouser legs of those immediately above: from the start he knew he had to adjust to the demands of the mire and learn to live in it show more with no hope of reward for his pains...

When Triste's mother dies, he is left in a Buenos Aires slum, completely reliant on himself. An initial attempt at life as an underage pool shark ends painfully. However, the attention it garnered provides a new line of work. Triste finds himself working under the direction of Chaves the priest. The work is infrequent, but pays a handsome retainer, well beyond anything he could earn elsewhere.

Slowly but surely the pair are drawn into the world of Peron's Argentina. Over time, as their work becomes more serious, the roles are reversed and Triste finds himself leading the now lapsed Chaves. Their work remains episodic and random, always directed from above. Neither has the knowledge or skills to progress to planning work in an increasingly fragmented and factional world.

Eventually the day comes when the pair must face up to the extent of their involvement and what it has meant for themselves and others. They make plans to leave both their work and Argentina, but if their lives have taught them anything, it is that life does not go as planned.

Vazquez Rial writes in a style that flows one minute and is staccato the the next, perfectly mirroring the rhythm of Triste's life. Conversations are few, brief and direct. The writing is stark and to the point, wasting no emotion on a character who lived free of emotional entanglement himself.

In his introduction, the author says that in writing this book from exile, he learned the history of "the other", who played such a role in his life in Argentina. Triste is a character we do not often see in literature, but an important one in so much of history.
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Es ist die Musik - eine Melodie voller Sehnsucht und Zärtlichkeit -, die Ramón Diaz für immer mit seiner Ankunft in Buenos Aires in Verbindung bringen wird.
Musik aus einem seltsamen Instrument namens Bandoneon, die von schwarzen Rhythmen geradezu pulsiert und gleichzeitig an die Orgeln der spanischen Kirchen erinnert.
Als im Jahr 1880 der fünfjährige Junge an der Hand seines ebenso gebannten und staunenden Vaters nach Argentinien kommt, sind sie nur zwei von mehr als einer Million show more Einwanderer aus ganz Europa, die in dem südamerikanischen Land eine neue Heimat finden. Es ist die Zeit, in der Glücksspiel und Prostitution zu raschem Reichtum verhelfen und in welcher der Tango - vor allem in der Person des großen Tangostars und Latinlovers Carlos Gardel - aus den Bordellen und Bars heraus seinen Siegeszug um die Welt antritt.
In dieser faszinierenden Umgebung gelingt Vater und Sohn der Aufstieg zu einer der einflussreichsten Familien des Landes.
Und es erwartet sie ein aufsehenerregendes Schicksal, wie es nur in Buenos Aires möglich ist, einer erwachenden Stadt voller Temperament und Leidenschaft.
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Un hombre de origen hispano-argentino y radicado en Barcelona, reconstruye la historia de su familia a partir del arribo a Buenos Aires de su bisabuelo y el hijo de éste, abuelo del narrador, el año 1880. Se trata de Roque Díaz Ouro, viudo de 35 años, y su hijo Ramón, de tan solo cinco, oriundos de Galicia como tantos españoles llegados a la Argentina en torno al año 1900, huyendo de la pobreza y el desamparo. A ellos se suman el alemán Hermann Frisch, Germán para los argentinos; show more eximio artista del bandoneón y un ferviente partidario del socialismo, estuvo presente en los dramáticos hechos de la Comuna de París, en 1871. Frisch es para Roque el mejor de los amigos y un segundo padre para Ramón, pero también una suerte de ángel guardián de los Díaz. Así pues, su lugar en la memoria familiar es igualmente importante. show less

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Statistics

Works
44
Also by
4
Members
168
Popularity
#126,678
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
5
ISBNs
64
Languages
2

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