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  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407016740
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336
Categories:

Delirium





A beautiful and unsettling story from the one the finest Latin American authors.

Aguliar returns home after a four-day business trip to discover that his beloved wife has gone mad. Desperate to rescue Agustina from her sudden, devastating insanity, Aguliar delves back into her shadowy past. Other narratives are intertwined with his frantic search for the truth; that of Midas, a flamboyant drug-trafficker and Agustina's former lover, and Agustina's splintered memories of her own troubled childhood. The key to her madness lies buried deep in a Colombian story of money, power and corruption.

  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407016740
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336
Categories:

About the author

Laura Restrepo

Laura Restrepo is a best-selling author in South America. An active political journalist, she was a member of the peace commission that brought the Colombian government and guerrillas to the negotiating table in 1984. She lives in Colombia.

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Praise for Delirium

Delirio is a Colombian story, an expression of everything that fascinates us about Colombia, including what's terrifyingly fascinating. Restrepo has a total mastery over what she writes, an astonishing but absolute mastery. Delirium is one of the finest novels written in recent memory

José Saramago

Delirium has a determined and muscular narrative, with dry humour and a terrible sense of menace

Daily Telegraph

A book and a half: stunning, dense, complex, mind-blowing

Washington Post

A compelling and unnerving novel that offers profound insights into the deep scars that violence leaves on the individual and society

Observer

A disconcertingly lovely book...sharp, vivid, utterly persuasive

New York Times

Haunting...her unhinged heroine is a true mirror of a damaged and deranged society

Guardian

Laura Restrepo's Delirium has an aesthetic distinction worthy of her precursors Garcia Marquez and Saramago. Like them, her narrative sense of erotic derangement is elaborately nuanced. Ultimately she seems to me an authentic descendent of the greatest New World author and seer of eros, Walt Whitman

Harold Bloom

This barrio angel teaches us to see behind the appearance of things and how to embrace reality with all the senses

Isabel Allende

This beautiful and disturbing book haunted me during the days I read it and long after I put it down. Love, unknowability, loss, and even various forms of gain elide from one to another of its passionate, unnerving voices

Vikram Seth
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