Publishers Weekly: "This novel stands on its own as a masterwork of storytelling."
Date: Jul 10 2012
The International Conference on Biography and Memory is being held in  Jerusalem, and our nameless hero, "a working writer," is honored to be  invited after a hiatus from writing due to illness. When he arrives, he  is shocked to find the city torn apart by war: "Facing us was a  labyrinth of asymmetrical streets, pockmarked with holes and filled with  steaming garbage. The houses, cubes of stone the color of sand, bore  the marks of grenades and mortars on their walls." His experience only  grows more intense as he sets out to find the truth behind the sudden  death of charismatic conference speaker José Maturana. The structure of  Gamboa's modern-day literary thriller ushers readers directly into the  action--the protagonist's point of view is intertwined with Maturana's  narrative in the first section, while the second portion comprises three  other conference speakers' lectures, each of which is a richly told  story in its own right. Finally, the last part of the novel returns to  the writer's quest to solve Maturana's mysterious death. The  Colombian-born Gamboa's work calls to mind Roberto Bolaño in its  masterful suspense, complex literary references, and frank depiction of  violence, sex, and drugs, but this novel stands on its own as a  masterwork of storytelling.