Rulfo airs a worldview dark enough to make Cormac McCarthy look like P.G. Wodehouse...Spectral stories shot through with violence and sorrow, and beautiful for all that.
Kirkus, Starred Review
Weatherford’s fresh new translation of this seminal 1953 collection from Mexican writer Rulfo (1917–1986) lays bare the enigmatic potency of its stories about love, poverty, and violence…As characters trek across vast and arduous desert terrain, it can be hard to distinguish the real from the imaginary, which adds to the book’s power…This will please Rulfo’s devotees and earn him new ones.
Publishers Weekly
Among contemporary writers in Mexico today [1959], Juan Rulfo is expected to rank among the immortals.
New York Times Book Review
What is remarkable about these sketches is that the characters are rendered with deep honesty; their faults are highlighted, celebrated in a way that is reminiscent of Chekhov's peasants.
Publishers Weekly
To read Rulfo's stories is to inhabit Mexico and, in the process, to have Mexico inhabit you.
NPR
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Juan Rulfo (1917–1986), who was born in the Mexican state of Jalisco, is best known for two seminal works that altered the course of Mexican and Latin American literature: El Llano en llamas (1953) and the novel Pedro Páramo (1955).
Douglas J. Weatherford is a professor of Hispanic literature and film at Brigham Young University. In addition to The Burning Plain, he has also translated Rulfo’s Pedro Páramo and The Golden Cockerel and Other Writings.