Here's the Venezuela Book We're Reading

Before we get to the results of the vote, I wanted to introduce you to another distinguished poet from Venezuela.

Yolanda Pantin is the winner of The Lorca Prize which highlighted Pantin as a poet having “developed a long and profound journey through the different resources of poetic discourse, from her exploration in conversational poetry in the languages of sentimentality.”

Still, the leaves,

were made to dance by the wind
a melancholy dance

of hope,
blind, under the storm.
— Dead Can Dance

but WHAT BOOK ARE WE READING IN August?

Winner of the Arturo Uslar Pietri award for Latin American literature & shortlisted for the Critics Award of Venezuela

Eugenia Blanc, a young Caraqueñan and quintessential teenager at war with the world around her, has one aim: after graduating from high school, to abandon Venezuela definitively. She embarks on a spontaneous road trip in a banged-up Fiat with her rebellious classmate Luis Tévez, in search of her grandfather, the one person who can provide her with the documents that would allow her to leave the country. While Eugenia and Luis’s tentative, troubled romance unfolds during the Chávez era, the story also looks back at Venezuela’s “lost decade” of the 1990s, a time of intractable violence, inequality, corruption, and instability that led to Chávez’s election.

With an unvarnished fluidity that brings to mind Jack Kerouac and a crazy-ass playlist that ranges from REM to Bob Dylan to El Canto del Loco to Shakira, Blue Label is an audacious, dark novel with a gut-punch of an ending; the prize-winning book by a writer who has cemented his reputation as a major Latin American voice.

Blue Label is a wickedly well-written novel, with electric prose that delivers one jolt after another, a subtle and joyful sense of humor, an intoxicating infectiousness, a complex character about whom we want to know everything, and an ending that leaves the reader with a feeling of sweet melancholy. It’s a book we’ll be talking about for years to come.” Daniel Saldaña París

“One part Scheherazade, two parts Boccaccio, a twist of Bolaño, and a dash of bitters. Blue Label is intoxicating, hilarious, and the best novel on the calamity that is today's Venezuela.” —Carmen Boullosa

(Group read suggestion from Beth McCrea, book club co-founder.)

View on Amazon | Bookshop.org | SecondSale used book

FIND THE BOOK INTERESTING?

Join our online book club in Facebook if you haven’t already. You can post on any bookish topic including, but not limited to, global reads. Beginning August 31, we’ll be discussing the book above in an online event for 5 days which you can pop in & out of at any time.

A graph showing the results of the vote as follows: 1 - Blue Label 2 - It Would be Night in Caracas 3 - Doña Barbara 4 - The Last Days of El Commandante 5 - Barrio Rising 6 - Colaterales/Collateral