Overview
Finally available again after many years, one of the most compelling novels from Argentina’s great novelists.
Awash in small-town gossip, petty jealousy, and intrigues, Manuel Puig’s Heartbreak Tango is a comedic assault on the fault lines between the disappointments of the everyday world, and the impossible promises of commercials, pop songs, and movies. This melancholy and hilarious tango concerns the many women in orbit around Juan Carlos Etchepare, an impossibly beautiful Lothario wasting away ever-so-slowly from consumption, while those who loved and were spurned by him move on into workaday lives and unhappy marriages. Part elegy, part melodrama, and part dirty joke, this wicked and charming novel demonstrates Manuel Puig’s mastery of both the highest and lowest forms of life and culture.
Synopsis
Finally available again after many years, one of the most compelling novels from Argentina’s great novelists.
Editorials
From the Publisher
“Puig’s work is among the most original of the final years of the 20th century. (Mario Vargas Llosa)A brilliant, forceful, melancholic arabesque of a novel, the tone reminiscent of Bertolucci’s freer moments. This is surely the most detailed and least sentimental elegy ever written. (Kirkus Reviews)
A brilliant Argentine novelist, indebted to Joyce and Faulkner, but endowed with formidably original comic talents. (Library Journal)”