The Silentiary by Esther Allen - ISBN: 9781681375625
Paperback
Murderous thought experiment ignites a writer’s dark ambition in postwar South America.

$39.51

  • Paperback

    176 pages

  • Release Date

    15 February 2022

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Summary

In post-WWII South America, a struggling writer embarks on a murderous thought experiment to help kickstart his career in this next tale of longing from the author of Zama.

The Silentiary takes place in a nameless Latin American city during the early 1950s. A young man employed in middle management entertains an ambition to write a book of some sort. But first he must establish the necessary precondition, which the crowded and noisily industrialized city always denies him, ho…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781681375625
ISBN-10:1681375621
Author:Esther Allen, Antonio Di Benedetto
Publisher:New York Review Books
Imprint:NYRB Classics
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:176
Release Date:15 February 2022
Weight:368g
Dimensions:202mm x 127mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

The Silentiary is an urban novel, but the city manifests almost exclusively through sound, which tortures the narrator with its crushing omnipresence… . Agency and its destruction is The Silentiary’s, indeed the entire Trilogy of Expectation’s, central drama: What can an individual do against the abstract and inescapable exhaustion of the present? … Di Benedetto was a poet of individuals in conflict with the historical conditions into which they were born, infected with a will to live that they could only resent.” —Federico Perelmuter, The Baffler

“Blending the futility of Kafka’s surveyors with the inner turmoil of Dostoyevsky’s underground men, Di Benedetto’s martyrs of deferment await a deliverance that never comes. Their lives—inert, almost parenthetical—offer up the psychological extremity of stasis. Madness, obsession, and terminal lassitude hang in equipoise from his subtle systems of narrative suspension… . Di Benedetto’s lean, existential fictions have always dramatized the impossibility of living… . Di Benedetto’s strange, austere book of foiled escapes and delicate cruelties glows with a lunar abstraction.” —Dustin Illingworth, The Nation

““Di Benedetto’s narrators cannot take hold of anything, even their own callousness. They falter; they flicker; they do not coalesce…It is hard to imagine a more prescient meditation on the dizzying senselessness of suffering.” —Becca Rothfeld, Bookforum

“Di Benedetto recasts the major conflict of the modern world as a war between noise and silence with this sly treatise on an individual’s attempts to remain sane in a city where his consciousness is frequently set off-kilter, ‘in defiance of any lunatic who might pretend otherwise.’ The result is existential, nervy, and crisply imagined.” —Publishers Weekly

The Silentiary is the second book in what is known as di Benedetto’s Trilogy of Expectation, following Zama, a mordant chronicle of inaction set in a tedious 18th-century backwater of colonial South America. The books have a spiritual kinship with Samuel Beckett’s postwar trilogy of monologue novels in their deadpan rendering of comic futility and monomania.” —Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal

“[Antonio di Benedetto’s] hero’s existential predicament might recall Kafka or Dostoevsky, albeit on a lighter scale. [The Silentiary] develops in spare, careful prose and sustains a thread of dry humor… A strange, amusing novel.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“Di Benedetto writes in sharp, modern, deceptively simple prose … he was a bridge between Jorge Luis Borges, with his mental labyrinths, and Roberto Bolaño, a peripatetic Chilean whose work explored both the condition of the writer and chronic violence in Latin America.” —Michael Reid, The Economist

“[The Silentiary] calls to mind Kafka’s pregnantly indecipherable novels, but Di Benedetto fills out his quasi-allegorical premise with so many dingy particulars that his narrator seems to experience his universal problem, in what may be the universal way, as a private shame and defeat.” —Benjamin Kunkel, The New Yorker

About The Author

Esther Allen

Antonio Di Benedetto (1922-1986) was an Argentine journalist and the author of five novels, the most well known being Zama. His first book, the story collection Mundo Animal, appeared in English translation in 1997 as Animal World.

Juan Jose Saer (1937-2005) was considered one of the most important Latin American authors to come after Jorge Luis Borges. He wrote several novels, a few of which are available in English, including The Regal Lemon Tree and The Witness.

Esther Allen received the 2017 National Translation Award for her translation of Antonio Di Benedetto’s Zama. Co-founder of the PEN World Voices Festival in New York City, she teaches at City University of New York’s Graduate Center and Baruch College, where she directs the Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence Program. In 2006 the French government named her a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters.

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