NECROPOLIS is a strange and wonderful novel. Colombian  author Santiago Gamboa sets the stage as he has an author, who is not  named, invited to the International Congress of Biography and Memory.  Gamboa puts into motion the cast of characters in a hotel in Jerusalem,  just past the military checkpoints, the author describes. Just for  starters, Gamboa introduces his readers to the author/narrator, whose  life has “slowed down,” an evangelical preacher, a couple of chess  players, and a porn star. The depth of Gamboa’s descriptions border on  the lyrical and are packed with a punch, such as the exchange the author  reports between himself and the famous bibliophile Supervielle:  “…because marriage, as I’m sure you know, has the same decaying effect  on love that heat and the passing of the days has on meat….”
Gamboa does a masterful job of keeping the voices of his characters  distinct. This is no small feat, when Gamboa’s Jose Maturana, the  evangelical pastor, is found dead and the investigation seems to favor  an explanation of suicide. Well, except for a few things that just don’t  add up. With Necropolis, Gamboa has definitely earned the critical praise as an inventive writer.
--Elizabeth Humphrey