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The Halfway House, by Guillermo Rosales Preface by José Manuel Prieto; Translated by Anna Kushner |
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“This
posthumous translation of Rosales, a Cuban-American writer who committed
suicide in 1993, delivers a raw, powerful story set in a Miami home
for the mentally ill… It’s a frightening, nihilistic cousin of One
Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” Never before available in English, The Halfway House is a trip to the darkest corners of the human condition. Humiliations, filth, stench, and physical abuse comprise the asphyxiating atmosphere of a halfway house for indigents in Miami where, in a shaken mental state, the writer William Figueras lives after his exile from Cuba. He claims to have gone crazy after the Cuban government judged his first novel “morose, pornographic, and also irreverent, because it dealt harshly with the Communist Party,” and prohibited its publication. By the time he arrives in Miami twenty years later, he is a “toothless, skinny, frightened guy who had to be admitted to a psychiatric ward that very day” instead of the ready-for-success exile his relatives expected to welcome and receive among them. Placed in a halfway house, with its trapped bestial inhabitants and abusive overseers, he enters a hell. Romance appears in the form of Frances, a mentally fragile woman and an angel, with whom he tries to escape in this apocalyptic classic of Cuban literature. “Behind the hardly one hundred pages,” Canarias Diario stated, “is the work of a tireless fabulist, a writer who delights in language, extracting verbs and adjectives which are powerful enough to stop the reader in his tracks.” “Confronting an impassive world, Guillermo Rosales has left us this
painful, violent, and lyrical testament.” “It seems almost impossible to find so much cruelty in barely one
hundred pages; but it’s just that behind these terrible and moving
one hundred pages there are thousands of pages, millions of sentences,
that reveal an entirely destroyed universe. Indispensable.”
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©2010
by New Directions Publishing Corp. |
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