Overview
"The Graham Greene of Uruguay . . . foreshadowing the work of Beckett and Camus."-The Sunday Telegraph
Medina lives across the river from Santa Maria, a town he is not allowed to enter and therefore wishes to destroy. Let the Wind Speak sees Juan Carlos Onetti coming to terms with his exclusion from the Santa Marias of his childhood, his first sexual conquests, his first cigarettes, and his first double whiskeys. A lover's bitter lament.
Juan Carlos Onetti (19091994) was born in Uruguay. After being imprisoned under the Argentinian military dictatorship, he was exiled to Spain. He was awarded Uruguay's national literature prize in 1963.
Synopsis
New title from the author of A Brief Life and The Shipyard, recognised as the Grahm Greene of Uruguay
Review: Lain American Literature and Arts - Ronald DeFeo
What holds us to [this book] is Onetti's tough uncompromising vision of existence, perhaps the toughest and most consistent in all of Latin American fiction and one that gives even his weaker narratives a disturbing, mournful conviction.
Editorials
Ronald DeFeo
What holds us to [this book] is Onetti's tough uncompromising vision of existence, perhaps the toughest and most consistent in all of Latin American fiction and one that gives even his weaker narratives a disturbing, mournful conviction.βReview: Lain American Literature and Arts