Sudden Death: A Novel
Sudden Death: A Novel book cover

Sudden Death: A Novel

Paperback – February 7, 2017

Price
$17.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
272
Publisher
Riverhead Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0735213449
Dimensions
5.11 x 0.64 x 8.01 inches
Weight
7.7 ounces

Description

“Brainspinning.” — Marlon James , Booker Prize-winning author of A Brief History of Seven Killings "[A]xa0novel without boundaries." — O , the Oprah Magazine"Brilliantly original. The best new novel I've read this year." — Salman Rushdie "[A]xa0bawdy, often profane, sprawling, ambitious book that is as engaging as it is challenging.”xa0— Vogue “ Sudden Death is the best kind of puzzle, its elements so esoteric and wildly funny that readers will race through the book, wondering how Álvaro Enrigue will be able to pull a novel out of such an astonishing ball of string. But Enrigue absolutely does; and with brilliance and clarity and emotional warmth all the more powerful for its surreptitiousness.” xa0— Lauren Groff , New York Times -bestselling author of Fates and Furies "Mind-bending."xa0— Wall Street Journal "Engrossing... rich with history." — The New Yorker "Writing with his customary intensity about his favorite sport, David Foster Wallace described tennis as 'chess on the run, beautiful and infinitely dense.' In his droll and erudite new novel, Sudden Death ,xa0Álvaro Enriguexa0provides his own distinct take on that chess-on-the-run notion and elevates it to an even more exalted level... [G]lorious... [H]is approach has both great entertainment value and intellectual appeal... Splendid."xa0—Larry Rohter, New York Times "Here is a novel thatxa0does full justice toxa0the phrase 'cutting edge': In the manner ofxa0its protagonist, Caravaggio, Sudden Death is at oncexa0formally audacious andxa0piercinglyxa0 humane." – Garth Risk Hallberg , New York Times bestselling author of City on Fire "What makes the novel so enthralling is the intimate humanity of its characters. Enrigue demystifies them using a rich, baroque naturalism, cut by flippancy and goofy jokes (all hail to translator Natasha Wimmer for relaxed perfection in every key)… Sudden Death resembles the arts it celebrates: selective, dramatized, all dark gaps and sensual glare, bending naturalism to some post-God purpose, like Caravaggio. Building a luxuriant picture that only ignites into meaning when angled a certain way, like the feather artists. Throughout this mercurial novel, playing fast and loose with facts lets richer truths about the world emerge."xa0— The Washington Post "[A]xa0novel of revolution in the spatial and historical sense of the word....xa0And structurally, Sudden Death isn't normative: a short screenplay and the author's emails are interspersed with short entries from obscure sporting dictionaries and excerpts from humanist classics. Chapters are short, enticing and written with a casual erudition that whispers to readers that, no matter the apparent surprises of the game, the author is in full control.xa0Enrigue muses on the nature of the novel and his intentions in writing Sudden Death as easily as he holds a candle to the obscure maneuvers of the powerful. And he has a poet's ear, beautifully attended to by Natasha Wimmer's translation.... Sudden Death shows us that games are never merely games, because no game is played without consequences."xa0— Los Angeles Times “By turns intellectual and earthy, Enrigue’s fictionalized account of Renaissance Europe and 16th century Mexico is the best kind of history lesson: erudite without being stuffy, an entertaining work that incorporates the Counter-Reformation, the Spanish conquest of the Aztec empire, art history and even a grammar lesson on Spanish diminutives into one mesmerizing narrative.”xa0— San Francisco Chronicle "At once erudite and phantasmagoric." — The Millions "[A]n exhilarating, funny, and surprisingly sexy read. Enrigue turns historical figures into real, flesh-and-blood people."xa0— Buzzfeed "Inventive...xa0The book bounces back and forth between the old world and the new, the past and the present, conquistadors and Mayans, and much more as it reimagines history as a sometimes brutal and sometimes hilarious tennis match."xa0— Thrillist “This novel by one of Mexico’s most innovative authors is a triumph of narrative skill, humour and lightly worn erudition.” — The Financial Times “Like the tennis court, fiction can be both a constrained and a constraining space… Enrigue teasingly suggests that the only debt a novel has is to its own internal coherence… In less able hands, this could all feel a bit labored, but in Sudden Death the postmodernist flourishes are never gimmicks. They are suited to their subject, reflecting and revealing the games and tricks of empires and of the histories they construct to justify themselves.”xa0— Bookforum “ Sudden Death is very, very funny and it is unfailingly brilliant and I have no idea how to describe it--another one of its rare virtues. I might say it is about tennis, or history, or art, or absurdity, but more accurate would be to say, simply, that it’s essential reading.”— Rivka Galchen "A story of history plunging forward and the world at a defining moment. Rackets are raised; the court looms large. Finally a tale that truly defies the bounds of the novel."xa0— Enrique Vila-Matas “ Sudden Death is a unique object – tropical and transatlantic; hypermodern and antiquarian—a specialized literary instrument designed to resist the deadly certainties of universal history. But don’t let that confuse you. Sure, his method may be all playfulness and multiplicity, but Álvaro Enrigue is the most disabused novelist I know.”xa0— Adam Thirlwell , author of Lurid & Cute “A full-fledged writer.”xa0— Mario Vargas Llosa “[Enrigue] belongs to many literary traditions at once and shows a great mastery of them all. . . . His novel belongs to Max Planck’s quantum universe rather than the relativistic universe of Albert Einstein: a world of coexisting fields in constant interaction and whose particles are created or destroyed in the same act.”xa0— Carlos Fuentes "In this wildly surreal novel — translated by Natasha Wimmer, who also translated Roberto Bolaño — the Mexican-born author imagines a 16th century tennis match between the Italian painter Caravaggio and the Spanish poet Francisco de Quevedo played with a ball made from the hair of the beheaded Anne Boleyn. And then things really get strange."xa0— Newsday “A rare example of an artful, comedic, deeply literary novel with the potential to become a fixture on bookshelves everywhere.” — Flavorwire “Beautifully rendered… Sudden Death is one of the most engaging, audacious, and flat-out fun works of fiction I've read in a while.” —Vice.com xa0 "Exuberantly intellectual… Enrigue transmutes the familiar, and shifts our awareness. Sudden Death is an original, transformative work.” —BBC.com xa0 xa0“The latest novel from Álvaro Enrigue defies any kind of easy description… If you like your fiction both gripping and impossible to categorize, this may be your new obsession.” —Vol. 1 Brooklyn xa0 xa0“This rich novel will make the world come alive for you in completely new ways.” — Bustle “Álvaro Enrigue’s Sudden Death reads more like an intoxicating adventure than a novel — set around the world in the 16th century, Sudden Death presents familiar players (Galileo, Caravaggio, Anne Boleyn, Cortés, and more) like we’ve never seen them before. Spectacularly original, Enrigue’s daring novel challenges everything readers think they know about European colonialism, history, art, and modernity.”xa0— Buzzfeed , Most Exciting Books Coming in 2016 xa0 “Joyfully disorienting… Enrigue’s ambitious tale bends in on itself and will reward readers who won’t mind feeling like wanderers lost in the increasingly erudite corridors of Borges’ library of Babel.” — Booklist " Sudden Death reads like a playful novel written by a master with a wicked serve… Not only does the reader get to brawl, drink, and lovexa0with Caravaggio, but Enrigue slides effortlessly between the tennis match and discourses that turn into philosophical art history… The effect of these quick chapters is dazzling without being inaccessible."xa0— Kirkus “Enrigue may be the best Mexican writer at work today. This novel is genius.” —Scott Esposito“[Enrigue] keeps his reader spell-bound in these three-hundred pages, all while delivering a hair-raising lesson in history and literature.”xa0— Le Monde “The speculative weight of this novel is brilliant, intriguing. No less brilliant is its unreliable narration.” — El País Álvaro Enrigue was a Cullman Center Fellow and a Fellow at the Princeton University Program in Latin American Studies. He has taught at New York University, Princeton University, the University of Maryland, and Columbia University. His work has appeared in The New York Times , The Believer , The White Review , n+1 , London Review of Books , El País , among others.xa0This novel—his first translated into English—was awarded the prestigious Herralde Prize in Spain, the Elena Poniatowska International Novel Award in Mexico, and the Barcelona Prize for Fiction, and has been translated into many languages. Enrigue was born in Mexico and lives in New York City. Natasha Wimmer 's translations include The Savage Detectives and 2666 by Roberto Bolaño. She lives in New York City.

Features & Highlights

  • "Splendid" —
  • New York Times
  • "Mind-bending." —
  • Wall Street Journal
  • "Brilliantly original. The best new novel I've read this year." —
  • Salman Rushdie
  • A daring, kaleidoscopic novel about the clash of empires and ideas, told through a tennis match in the sixteenth century between the radical Italian artist Caravaggio and the Spanish poet Francisco de Quevedo, played with a ball made from the hair of the beheaded Anne Boleyn.
  • The poet and the artist battle it out in Rome before a crowd that includes Galileo, a Mary Magdalene, and a generation of popes who would throw the world into flames. In England, Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII execute Anne Boleyn, and her crafty executioner transforms her legendary locks into those most-sought-after tennis balls. Across the ocean in Mexico, the last Aztec emperors play their own games, as the conquistador Hernán Cortés and his Mayan translator and lover, La Malinche, scheme and conquer, fight and f**k, not knowing that their domestic comedy will change the course of history. In a remote Mexican colony a bishop reads Thomas More’s
  • Utopia
  • and thinks that it’s a manual instead of a parody. And in today’s New York City, a man searches for answers to impossible questions, for a book that is both an archive and an oracle.Álvaro Enrigue’s mind-bending story features assassinations and executions, hallucinogenic mushrooms, bawdy criminals, carnal liaisons and papal schemes, artistic and religious revolutions, love and war. A blazingly original voice and a postmodern visionary, Enrigue tells the grand adventure of the dawn of the modern era, breaking down traditions and upending expectations, in this bold, powerful gut-punch of a novel.
  • Game, set, match.
  • Sudden Death
  • is the best kind of puzzle, its elements so esoteric and wildly funny that readers will race through the book, wondering how Álvaro Enrigue will be able to pull a novel out of such an astonishing ball of string.  But Enrigue absolutely does; and with brilliance and clarity and emotional warmth all the more powerful for its surreptitiousness.” —
  • Lauren Groff
  • ,
  • New York Times
  • -bestselling author of
  • Fates and Furies
  • "Engrossing... rich with Latin and European history."
  • —The New Yorker
  • "[A] bawdy, often profane, sprawling, ambitious book that is as engaging as it is challenging.”
  • —Vogue

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(65)
★★★★
25%
(54)
★★★
15%
(33)
★★
7%
(15)
23%
(50)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Slow Death

Melodic and rather fun prose, but lacks any semblance of a plot The writing, while entertaining at the outset, grew ever more tedious as it became apparent that there would be no character development, no storyline, and no climax.
1 people found this helpful
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Tennis Anyone?

A book that’s hard to classify but I think it’s mostly a historical novel told in vignettes, more-or-less tied in with the history of early tennis. Mostly the time frame is during the Renaissance, lets say the 1400’s and 1500’s, and the counter-reformation of the mid-1500’s. Tennis and tennis balls and tennis slippers are frequently mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays. Human hair used to be used to stuff tennis balls. The story starts off with a man named Rombaud, supposedly the executioner of Anne Boleyn, who accepts her hair as payment for his services. He then has her hair used to stuff tennis balls and sells the balls for a fortune.

There are a lot of good reviews out there so I’ll keep mine relatively brief. The main characters followed, that is those around whom the vignettes are focused, are the Italian painter Caravaggio, the Spanish poet Francisco de Quevido, Hernan Cortes (Hernando Cortez to us older folks), and his wife and a daughter who returned to Europe, and some of the popes such as Pius IV.

A lot of the story is focused on a supposed tennis match between Caravaggio and Quevido. The narrative, like a tennis match, goes back and forth, back and forth, in alternating stories. We go back and forth geographically as well, as we go from Spain to Rome to Mexico City, to England, and the vignettes give us bits and pieces of the story.

The author gives us fair warning that not all things are true. But we have to figure out which ones. (I consulted reviews from The Guardian, the NY Times and The Harvard Review to give me an idea of the relative truth of some of these stories.) Although hair, and sometime human hair, was used to pack tennis balls in this era, there’s no evidence that Anne Boleyn’s hair was used in balls after she was executed. And her supposed executioner, a Frenchman named Rombaud, is fiction. History does nor record her executioner’s name.

And it’s fake news that Andrew Carnegie bought one of the Boleyn tennis balls and donated it to the New York Public Library where it remains today. So, reader beware.

Some of the vignettes are about art. The use of hair in tennis balls provides a segue to hair used in artwork, such as scapulars made in Mexico for Cortes from the hair of an executed Aztec emperor and the iridescent bird feather art of the indigenous Aztecs and Nahuatl. We are told correctly that the indigenous art was turned toward religious artwork and that seven such miters, as they are called, survive today in museums. This is true and we are even given a list of the seven locations.

Tennis gives us another segue, this time linguistic: how some Nahuatl words made their way into Spanish and how tennis metaphors became euphemisms in Mexico for death: “He hung up his tennis shoes” or “”He went out tennis shoes first.” We also have a few vignettes about the evolution of ball games in general – the four the Romans played (none of which resembled tennis) and the deadly Aztec games.

We also learn a bit about art, especially that of Caravaggio. For example, he was his own model for Holofernes in the painting Judith Beheading Holofernes, and his Basket of Fruit was the trendsetting first painting of still life among Italian Renaissance painters.

One line I liked that summed up a messy relationship among two men, their shared prostitute, her pimp, a banker and a Cardinal (I know, it sounds like a joke …. they all walk into a bar…): “Never were the connections among politics, money, art, and semen so tight or so murky.”

I enjoyed reading the book. It’s relatively short for a historical novel – 272 pages although many pages contain only a paragraph or so of prose. It’s well-written with a lot of relatively interesting historical information that is accurate enough. The tennis ball theme substitutes for a plot. The on-going tennis match between the artist and the poet that continues throughout the book I found a bit boring and repetitive.

The Mexican author (b. 1969) has written a half-dozen novels, two books of short stories and a book of essays. Only two appear to have been translated into English (the other is Hypothermia. Sudden Death is by far his most widely-read work.
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Boleyn's Balls

I "accidentally" came across this novel simply because I will be interviewing Valeria Lusielli. Upon researching Luiselli via Wikipedia I saw she was married to a writer of whom I was unaware named Alvaro Enrigue. The only book of his that has been translated to English so far is Sudden Death. I had no expectations since the title made me think it might be a mystery novel. So I got both an audio CD and the book from my library and was thrown into a world(s) that I was not expecting. While the novel is centered around a tennis match between the Spanish poet Quevedo and the Italian artist Caravaggio, there are multiple levels to this novel. Other story lines include: Cortes and his concubine-translator Malinalli as they combine to overthrow the Aztec empire; the author emailing his publisher; and an occasional aside where the author tries to describe what he is writing (e.g., in the chapter ""Priests Who Were Swine"). In the following chapter titled "Third Set, Second Game" Enrigue brilliantly intersects the third set of the tennis match with memories of the previous evening's drunken encounter where Quevedo and Caravaggio meet---paralleling the tennis match itself where Enriigue uses each paragraph like a tennis ball to carry on two different stories. There might be better ways to describe this novel, but one consideration might be an anti-historical novel, something along the lines of John Barth's The Sot-Weed Factor. One of the great pleasures in life is when you come across something in art (e.g., whether it is a movie, LP, or a book) that totally surprises you. Such is the case with Enrigue's Sudden Death which is a brilliant gem.
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Loved this book

Loved this book. What a treat. I have recommended it to as many people as possible. I found myself Googling things just to see what was true and what was story. Learned so much at the same time was so impressed with the creative writing. A bit like a Deadpool movie in a way.
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Don't like tennis? Find something else

If you are not a tennis fan, you cannot finish this book. What is very impressive is the skill with which the author found all the friends he needed to publish it. I envy him.
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Five Stars

smart, funny, wonderfully researched, really well written.