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Lost City Radio (P.S.) [Paperback]

Daniel Alarcon
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 257 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial; Reprint edition (Feb 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0060594810
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060594817
  • Product Dimensions: 20.4 x 15.1 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,879,185 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

'It would be wrong to give away even a shred of plot here, but it must be said that the final pages are extraordinarily haunting, managing, in a way that only great writing can, to be both tragic and wonderful. The real surprise, however, is that this is a first novel, for “Lost City Radio” is a book of extraordinary power, by a writer – recently selected as one of Granta's Best Young American Novelists – whose own endless invention and send of colour are already second to none.' Guardian

‘“Lost City Radio” is a gripping and tense political fable, sharply rooted in a world we have come to recognize. With echoes of Orwell and Huxley, and with images of astonishing originality, Daniel Alarcon creates a universe both menacing and tender, filled with characters imagined with skill and nuance. The scope of the narrative and the sense of urgency in the story make clear that he is one of the most exciting and ambitious writers to emerge in recent years.’ Colm Toibin, author of ‘The Master’

‘Daniel Alarcon writes about subterfuge, lies, and the arbitrary recreation of history with a masterful clarity. By accepting the premise that war is senseless, he goes on to make sense of the lives that are destroyed in its wake. “Lost City Radio” is both ambitious and resonant.’ Ann Patchett, author of ‘Bel Canto’

‘Daniel Alarcon has written a book that fully captures the slow, quiet, terror of war. From the first page, the reader like Alarcon's characters, is captured by an uncertainty and longing that traps you in the pages of this book and makes it impossible to leave this story alone. Alarcon's prose is quick and beautiful. This is a first novel that needs to be read.’ Uzodinma Iweala, author of ‘Beats of No Nation’

'Powerful debut novel. Alarcon is still in his late 20s, and was recently selected by Granta as one of America's Best Young Novelists, but he handles the complicated plot mechanisms in this storyline beautifully. Time and again he also resists the urge to pass judgement on any of his characters. And so we emerge from this impressive political fable with a profound sense of loss, of rage, and a clarifying glimpse into the futility of violence as both ideology and practise.' Scotland on Sunday

'A powerfully, coolly written novel. Peruvian-born novelist Alarcon's debut reads as directly as if he had lived Norma's harrowing life himself.' Glasgow Herald

'Shifting between different points of view and time frames to encompass the before, during and after of the war. Alarcón builds up a tenderly imagined tale of love, fear and betrayal, which captures the confusion and futility of the nebulously defined conflict his characters are caught up in. It's a precisely drawn picture of people defined by what they have lost, that has resonance far beyond the continent it's set in.' Metro

'Impressive debut novel. An imaginative, lucid depiction of a traumatised society.' FT Magazine

'Powerful first novel. It is set in an unnamed Latin American country that physically resembles Brazil but also brings to mind Argentina and Chile under junta rule. Alarcón is at his best in evoking the unforgettable setting.' New Statesman

'All the colour that you would expect from South America is here. It is easy to see why Alarcon is shortlisted as a Best Young American novelist.' Sunday Tribune

‘A powerful and deeply moving novel about war and its effect on society and the individual. Alarcon's writing is mesmerising and utterly powerful. His descriptive passages are tender and filled with the insight of a masterful observer of human behaviour.' Irish Independent

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Scotland on Sunday

`Powerful debut novel...he handles the complicated plot mechanisms
in this storyline beautifully.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Sofia
Format:Paperback
Alarcon's first novel is a really compelling read, a personal portrait of loss and the turmoil a person's wartime disappearance can cause.

Set in an unnamed South American state, the novel revolves around Norma, host of the title's Lost City Radio show, in which she provides a forum for people across the city to talk about those they have lost in the hope that they can be found or find answers to what happened to them. Norma's husband Rey is also one of the wartime lost, but she is unable to mention his name on the air for political reasons, so she must nurse her grief and her unanswered questions alone. The monotony of her loneliness is then shattered when Victor, an eleven-year-old boy, arrives from the jungle.

While at times contrived and occasionally too obvious with plot lines, this remains a good read. The confusion of war, the lives left in limbo, the petty selfishnesses that draw huge consequences make this a very pacey and captivating novel. I would definitely recommend it and I will be looking to read other books by him.
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Format:Paperback
This is just an astonishing novel that deserves wide readership. Set in an unnamed South American country, it describes the chaotic, seemingly unending state of civil war, which few can recall starting, and few can decide if it has finally ended. The story is told through the life of Norma, who has a radio program in which she simply reads the names of the missing, the disappeared, those being sought by wives, children, parents. Norma's voice becomes the most well-known in the country. Hers is the voice of hope and restoration in a country ripped apart by boy soldiers who apparently have no sense of their purpose, other than to kill. It's a country of peasants whose isolated villages are visited by armed insurgents, and their children coerced into the rebel army. It is a novel about love and loss and the anguish of ignorance in an atmosphere of almost surreal paranoia. The terror moves in the city with its unlit streets, and darkened bars, and spies who don't really know why they are spying, or whose side they are really on - if anything can be said to be real in the madness of the country's deterioration. The terror also moves in the jungles where peasants catch snippets of news on brokendown radios or gain often unreliable information from armies passing through. It is a novel about love - the survival of love, the hopes and dreams of lovers separated by the bewildering collapse of the country. A gorgeous, honest book - moving, touching, sad. Please read this truly fine novel whose depth of insight far outshines most books publishers foist on us in these days of the slick and shallow.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By johnverp TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
I am somewhat embarrassed to say this book did little for me.

I had expected that the serious struggles of war would provide a far richer story. I also expected that Norma, as a radio show host providing a voice for the country's suffering population, would play a much bigger role and in far less bland fashion.

I found the novel to be slow and confusing (particularly with the changes in time periods) and full of colourless characters.

It may be unkind of me to be too critical as I see that nearly all other reviewers on the US and UK sites have written highly of this novel. It may therefore be fairer for me to summarise my views by saying this book wasn't for me. 5/10
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