Writing in the tradition of William Faulkner and John Dos Passos, Saccomanno, winner of the 2013 Dashiell Hammett Prize for noir fiction, exposes the secret life of a seaside resort town south of Buenos Aires, after the tourists have left. The one-way mirror in a Gesell dome that lets researchers watch people acting unawares is the metaphor here for readers observing the vagaries of the locals during the off-season. That this behavior is so savage reflects not only the town's Nazi past but also the less-than-civilized recent history of Argentina itself. A motley crew of loan sharks, skinheads, blackmailers and phantoms informs this novel, and the omniscient narrator alternates with first-person testimonies and articles from the town's weekly newspaper. Dante is its editor and sole reporter, who with his passion for the garbage of other people's lives depends on a limo driver and a unisex stylist for the sordid details that he prints.
VERDICT This panoramic catalog of entertaining antisocial behavior, much of which the translator admits, in her excellent introduction, is over the top, is tempered and redeemed by its humor and compassion. An absorbing narrative for sophisticated readers.
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