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Death in the Andes Paperback | Pages: 322 pages
Rating: 3.69 | 5989 Users | 532 Reviews

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Original Title: Lituma en los Andes
ISBN: 057117549X (ISBN13: 9780571175499)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Tomás Carreño, Corporal Lituma
Setting: Peru (Perú)(Peru)
Literary Awards: Premio Planeta (1993), Premio San Clemente for Novela Castelá (1995)

Narrative As Books Death in the Andes

In an isolated community in the Peruvian Andes, a series of mysterious disappearances has occurred. Army corporal Lituma and his deputy Tom�s believe the Shining Path guerrillas are responsible, but the townspeople have their own ideas about the forces that claimed the bodies of the missing men. This riveting novel is filled with unforgettable characters, among them disenfranchised Indians, eccentric local folk, and a couple performing strange cannibalistic sacrifices. As the investigation moves forward, Tom�s entertains Lituma with the surreal tale of a precarious love affair.

Death in the Andes is both a fascinating detective novel and an insightful political allegory. Mario Vargas Llosa offers a panoramic view of Peruvian society, from the recent social upheaval to the cultural influences in its past.

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Title:Death in the Andes
Author:Mario Vargas Llosa
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 322 pages
Published:1996 by Faber and Faber (first published 1993)
Categories:Fiction. Cultural. Latin American. Novels

Rating Containing Books Death in the Andes
Ratings: 3.69 From 5989 Users | 532 Reviews

Evaluation Containing Books Death in the Andes
nearly done and it is just amazing. vargos llosa is god. seriously. what he packs into a short novella is astonishing. he's climbing the ranks of my favorite living writers. might have to read his entire body of work.

Awesome book. Mario Vargas Llosa blends folk tales with a love story behind the political screen of Shining Path terrorism. How did he do it? The love story (and its a great love story) emerges from the young guard Tomas who tells Corporal Lituma as he has investigates three mysterious disappearances of local people including the mute young man he befriended. Constantly threatening them is the terror of the Shining Path guerrillas who threaten to kill everything and everyone in their path. To

The charge that all revolutions are bound to devour its own children is one of the oldest and most common admonitions against the peoples collectively rising up to effect massive social transformations. First heard in the aftermath of the French Revolution with the Jacobins falling under their own Guillotines, this discourse has become common fare in the 20th Century.Lumping together the nightmarish experience under all victorious and defeated revolutionary movements from the Stalinist show

I have enjoyed everything I have read by Vargas Llosa, so I am biased. This was a great read, I didn't want to put it down. I was quite surprised that it had a (relatively) happy ending, considering the whole novel is about the death and destruction brought on by terrorism and corrupt government.****I first read this novel in Spanish in June 2008. Three years later, I am reading it in English, planning to teach it in a freshman seminar, and trying to read it through the eyes of an 18-year-old.

Two Peruvian police officers, both outsiders, are stationed in a remote post in the Andes. While they investigate the disappearance of 3 men a terroristic organization operates in the area. In the cold lonely nights, the younger officer (Tomasito) tells the older officer (Lituma) his love story which is how he came to be assigned to this dying mining town. They frequent a bar where the story of its owners weaves in and out.Like Llosas Conversation in the Cathedral, the text is hard to follow.

This was an excellent story with great characters and captivating narration. Lituma is now stationed in the mountains in Naccos (after being ejected from Piura after Palomino Molera and needs to solve a triple homicide which superficially looks like it may be the work of the Sendero Luminoso terrorists (whom we also gets glimpses at during the book through some of their victims). The pace never lets up and we also are treated to local folklore like in The Storyteller which plays an important

The charge that all revolutions are bound to devour its own children is one of the oldest and most common admonitions against the peoples collectively rising up to effect massive social transformations. First heard in the aftermath of the French Revolution with the Jacobins falling under their own Guillotines, this discourse has become common fare in the 20th Century.Lumping together the nightmarish experience under all victorious and defeated revolutionary movements from the Stalinist show

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