Antwerp, Roberto Bolano
Antwerp, Roberto Bolano
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Antwerp

Author: Roberto Bolaño, Natasha Wimmer

Narrator: David Crommett

Unabridged: 1 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/09/2025


Synopsis

“Legendary . . . Bolaño has proven [that literature] can do anything.” —Jonathan Lethem, The New York Times Book Review

“A supernova of creativity whose light is still arriving at our shores.” —Giles Harvey, The New Yorker

Often called the “big bang” of Roberto Bolaño’s universe, Antwerp is his first novel—or the shattered remnants of one. Written when he was just twenty-seven years old, it was so intensely strange and solitary that he tucked it away for more than twenty years, certain that any publisher would slam the door in his face. It proceeds in hallucinatory sketches: a lonely highway, a desolate campground, a freshly abandoned hotel room; a tryst, an interrogation, a murder; and somewhere just out of reach, a young, feverish writer named Roberto Bolaño drifting in and out of view. A radical, sui generis effort by a burgeoning genius, Antwerp is an essential part of Bolaño’s oeuvre.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

About Roberto Bolaño

Roberto Bolaño was born in Santiago, Chile, in 1953. He grew up in Chile and Mexico City, where he was a founder of the Infrarealist poetry movement. His first full-length novel, The Savage Detectives, received the Herralde Prize and the Rómulo Gallegos Prize when it appeared in 1998. Roberto Bolaño died in Blanes, Spain, at the age of fifty.

About Natasha Wimmer

Natasha Wimmer is a translator who has worked on Roberto Bolaño’s 2666, for which she was awarded the PEN Translation prize in 2009, and The Savage Detectives. She lives in New York.


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Quotes

“Writing is always an expansion: a writer, given only one life, is compelled to manufacture other lives, other stories, other realms . . . It’s hard to think of a writer who has multiplied the possibilities more times than Roberto Bolaño . . . [Antwerp is] exceptional and moving.”
—Nicole Krauss, The Guardian

“Dreamlike . . . A disturbing, disjointed crime story . . . Poetic and beautiful.”
—Christopher Swetala, GQ

“The phantom of a thriller.”
—Michael Kerrigan, The Times Literary Supplement

“Incredibly haunting . . . A trance of pure atmosphere . . . Antwerp stands alone.”
—Rob Doyle, The Irish Times