Amazon.com: And Let the Earth Tremble at Its Centers (Texas Pan American Literature in Translation) (9780292719620): Gonzalo Celorio, Dick Gerdes, Rubén Gallo: Books


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And Let the Earth Tremble at Its Centers (Texas Pan American Literature in Translation)
 
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And Let the Earth Tremble at Its Centers (Texas Pan American Literature in Translation) [Paperback]

Gonzalo Celorio (Author), Dick Gerdes (Translator), Rubén Gallo (Foreword)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

March 1, 2009 Texas Pan American Literature in Translation

Professor Juan Manuel Barrientos prefers footsteps to footnotes. Fighting a hangover, he manages to keep his appointment to lead a group of students on a walking lecture among the historic buildings of downtown Mexico City. When the students fail to show up, however, he undertakes a solo tour that includes more cantinas than cathedrals. Unable to resist either alcohol itself or the introspection it inspires, Professor Barrientos muddles his personal past with his historic surroundings, setting up an inevitable conclusion in the very center of Mexico City.

First published in Mexico in the late 1990s, And Let the Earth Tremble at Its Centers was immediately lauded as a contemporary masterpiece in the long tradition of literary portraits of Mexico City. It is a book worthy of its dramatic title, which is drawn from a line in the Mexican national anthem.

Gonzalo Celorio first earned a place among the leading figures of Mexican letters for his scholarship and criticism, and careful readers will recognize a scholar's attention to accuracy within the novel's dyspeptic descriptions of Mexico City. The places described are indeed real (this edition includes a map that marks those visited in the story), though a few have since closed or been put to new uses. Dick Gerdes's elegant translation now preserves them all for a new audience.

(20090126)

Editorial Reviews

Review

It's intriguing and intelligent; readers familiar with the city will appreciate it anew. (Publishers Weekly )

About the Author

A scholar, fiction writer, and critic, GONZALO CELORIO lives in Mexico City, where he has been head of UNAM's Latin American Literature Department since 1974. He is also author of the novels Amor Propio and Tres Lindas Cubanas; this is his first novel to be translated into English.

DICK GERDES is an award-winning translator based in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

RUBÉN GALLO is Associate Professor of Spanish-American Literature at Princeton University and editor of The Mexico City Reader, an acclaimed anthology about Mexico's capital city.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 174 pages
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press (March 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0292719620
  • ISBN-13: 978-0292719620
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,146,845 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Drunken Tour of El Centro, August 8, 2009
This review is from: And Let the Earth Tremble at Its Centers (Texas Pan American Literature in Translation) (Paperback)
It's rather hard to know what to say about this Mexican novel, which was originally published in 1999. If you've got some interest in Mexico City, particularly the old "El Centro" area, you might well find it a fascinating ramble down faded streets. You'll have to bear in mind, however, that your tour guide (and it is certainly a tour) is a melancholy 50-something professor who gets progressively drunker as he walks, stumbles, and eventually staggers from bar to bar. There's even a handy map at the start, to help you follow in his footsteps. It's the book that's begging for some enterprising lit student to mash up with Google Earth to create some kind of new digital literature.

According to the insightful foreword by Ruben Gallo (which I only read after finishing the main text), this slim novel falls firmly in a tradition of literature about Mexico City that includes Salvador Novo's New Mexican Grandeur (1946), Carlos Monsivais' Mexican Postcards, and Carlos Fuentes' Where the Air Is Clear (1959). These books all capture the city at various points in its geographic and cultural development, and the professor's tour certainly does the same.

The premise for this solo walking tour is that the professor is supposed to be meeting some students to lead them on this trip into the history and soul of the city. However, they didn't show, so he decides to continue on his own, rather than return home and nurse his hangover. There's a definite whiff of nostalgia as he relates his anecdotes to the absent students and engages in numerous ruminations/flashbacks to defining moments in his life. It very quickly takes on the air of a farewell, and it's hard not to spot where the narrative is headed.

I guess it's kind of interesting as an example of literature taking on urban studies or something like that, but it never really connected with me. Perhaps if I had ever been to Mexico City, I would feel differently (and as I write this, it occurs to me that my grandparents lived there in the 1940s and might have found the book rather interesting), but since I haven't, I was left unmoved. And of course, since ten years have passed since its original publication, you could also say that the portrait it provides is outdated. Still, perhaps worth picking up if you're headed to Mexico City for a visit.
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