The Sound of Things Falling
The Sound of Things Falling book cover

The Sound of Things Falling

Paperback – June 3, 2014

Price
$15.94
Format
Paperback
Pages
302
Publisher
Riverhead Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1594632747
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.9 x 8 inches
Weight
8.6 ounces

Description

Praise for The Sound of Things Falling "[A] Brilliant new novel...gripping...absorbing right to the end. The Sound of Things Falling may be a page turner, but it's also a deep meditation on fate and death."xa0— Edmund White, The New York Times Book Review "Deeply affecting and closely observed."xa0— Hector Tobar, Los Angeles Times "Like Bolaño, [Vasquez] is a master stylist and a virtuoso of patient pacing and intricate structure, and he uses the novel for much the same purpose that Bolaño did: to map the deep, cascading damage done to our world by greed and violence and to concede that even love can’t repair it."xa0— Lev Grossman, Time Magazine "Juan Gabriel Vasquez is a considerable writer. The Sound of Things Falling is an artful, ruminative mystery... And the reader comes away haunted by its strong playing out of an irreversible fate." — E. L. Doctorow "Compelling…genuine and magnificently written." — Library Journal, STARRED “Literary magic of one of Latin America’s most talented novelists…a masterpiece.” — Booklist, STARRED “An exploration in the ways in which stories profoundly impact our lives.” — Publishers Weekly, STARRED “Languid existential noir, one that may put you in mind of Paul Auster.” — Dwight Garner, New York Times "If you only read one book this month..." — Esquire "Razor-sharp" — O, the Oprah Magazine “An undoubted talent… Introspective and personal.” — The Wall Street Journal "It's noir raised to the level of art. It's a page-turner but it's also a profound meditation on fate and mortality." — 2013 Premior Gregor von Rezzori Prize announcement “Vásquez creates characters whose memories resonate powerfully across an ingeniously interlocking structure…Vásquez creates a compelling literary work—one where an engaging narrative envelops poignant memories of a fraught historical period.” — The New Republic “ The Sound of Things Falling is a masterful chronicle of how the violence between the cartels and government forces spilled out to affect and corrode ordinary lives. It is also Vásquez's finest work to date…. xa0His stark realism — the flip side of the magical variation of his compatriot Gabriel Garcia Marquez — together with his lyrical treatment of memory produces both an electrifying and a soberingxa0read.” — Malcolm Forbes , San Francisco Chronicle “Haunting…Vasquez brilliantly and sensitively illuminates the intimate effects and whispers of life under siege, and the moral ambiguities that inform survival.” – Cleveland Plain Dealer “Moving… The novel presents the human toll exacted by the country’s years of violence.” – New York Observer “Quietly elegant… Vásquez is a resourceful storyteller. Scenes and dialogue shine with well-chosen details. His theme echoes compellingly through family parallels, ill-fated flights and even a recurring hippo motif. He shrugs off the long shadow of Gabriel Garcia Marquez with a gritty realism that has its own persuasive magic.” xa0— Bloomberg News Praise for Juan Gabriel Vasquez "From the opening paragraph of The Informers , I felt myself under the spell of a masterful writer. Juan Gabriel Vásquez has many gifts—intelligence, wit, energy, a deep vein of feeling—but he uses them so naturally that soon enough one forgets one's amazement at his talents, and then the strange, beautiful sorcery of his tale takes hold.” — Nicole Krauss “Juan Gabriel Vásquez is one of the most original new voices of Latin American literature. His first novel, The Informers , a very powerful story about the shadowy years immediately following World War II, is testimony to the richness of his imagination as well as the subtlety and elegance of his prose.” — Mario Vargas Llosa “What Vásquez offers us, with great narrative skill, is that grey area of human actions and awareness where our capacity to make mistakes,xa0betray, and conceal creates a chain reaction which condemns us to a world without satisfaction. Friends and enemies, wives and lovers, parents and children mix and mingle angrily, silently, blindly, while the novelist uses irony and ellipsis to unmask his characters’ “self-protective strategies” and goes with themxa0– not discovering them, simply accompanying them – as they come to understand that an unsatisfactory life can also be the life they inherit.” — Carlos Fuentes “For anyone who has read the entire works of Gabriel García Márquez and is in search of a new Colombian novelist, then Juan Gabriel Vásquez's The Informers is a thrilling new discovery.” — Colm Tóibín “A fine and frightening study of how the past preys upon the present, and an absorbing revelation of a little-known wing of the theatre of the Nazi war.” — John Banville Praise for The Informers "[A]xa0remarkable novel. It deals with big universal themes... It is the best work of literary fiction to come my way since 2005…and into the bargain it is immensely entertaining, with twists and turns of plot that yield great satisfaction." — Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post “One hallmark of a gifted novelist is the ability to see the potential for compelling fiction in an incident, anecdote or scrap of history, no matter how dry or seemingly obscure, that others have overlooked. By that standard and several others, the career of Juan Gabriel Vásquez…is off to a notable start.…[A] straight-ahead, old-fashioned narrative… Two years ago Mr. Vásquez was included on a list of the most ‘important’ Latin American writers under 40, nominated by more than 2,000 authors, literary agents, librarians, editors and critics. The Informers alone justifies their choice, given its challenging subject and psychological depth, but clearly there are bigger and even more intriguing things on the way.” — Larry Rohter, The New York Times “Chilling…The past is a shadow-bound, elusive creature in [ The Informers ]… When pursued it may flee, or, if cornered, it may unleash terrible truths.” — Los Angeles Times “To read The Informers is to enjoy the shock of new talent… [Vásquez’s] novel is subtle, surprising and deeply pleasurable, with razors secreted among its pages.”xa0— The Cleveland Plain Dealer “Compelling…The book combines a reflection on the delicate bonds of family, a journey through one of the few untold stories of World War II and even a look at the sometimes parasitic nature of the media… What sets The Informers , apart from other historical novels is Vasquez's questioning of his own role as muckraker and writer.” — San Francisco Chronicle “Dramatic and surprising…” — Harper’s Magazine “Unlike anything written by his Latin American contemporaries. If there is any prevailing influence in this chilling work, it is in the late German writer, W.G. Sebald…The Informers deserves to be read…[O]ne of this year’s outstanding books.” — The Financial Times “Masterful…Vásquez has much in common with Roberto Bolaño…. But unlike Bolaño’s stolid, serviceable prose, Vásquez’s style is musical, occasionally even lush, and its poeticism remains unmuddled in McLean’s translation.” — Bookforum Praise for The Secret History of Costaguana “An intricately detailed, audacious reframing of Nostromo, the classic 1904 Joseph Conrad tale of power, corruption, intrigue and revolution in a South American country he called Costaguana. The Secret History of Costaguana is a potent mixture of history, fiction and literary gamesmanship. Vásquez's themes are of the moment: powerful countries (the U.S. foremost among them) dabbling in Latin American politics, bribing politicians and journalists, trolling for profits; European writers appropriating history for their own tales. His particular triumph with this novel is to remind us, as Balzac put it, that novels can be ‘the private histories of nations.’”— Los Angeles Times “[An] exceptional new novel…When Mr. Vásquez, like Conrad, focuses on the individuals trapped in these national tragicomedies, he displays a keen emotional and moral awareness. The Secret History of Costaguana is a cunning tribute to a classic, but it also stands on its own merits as a dense and involving story about men who are either manipulating history or finding themselves at the barrel-end of it.” — Wall Street Journal [A] post-modern literary revenge story.” — The New York Times Juan Gabriel Vásquez 's previous books include the Dublin Literary Award winner and national bestseller, The Sound of Things Falling , as well as the International Booker finalist The Shape of the Ruins , the award-winning novels The Informers , The Secret History of Costaguana , and the story collections Songs for the Flames and Lovers on All Saints' Day . Vásquez's novels have been published in twenty-eight languages worldwide. After sixteen years in France, Belgium, and Spain, he now lives in Bogotá. Anne McLean translates Latin American and Spanish novels, short stories, memoirs, and other writings. She has twice won both the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize and the Premio Valle Inclán, and received the Dublin Literary Award with Juan Gabriel Vásquez for his novelxa0The Sound of Things Falling. She lives in Toronto.

Features & Highlights

  • * National Bestseller and Dublin Literary Award winner* Hailed by Edmund White as "a brilliant new novel" on the cover of the New York Times Book Review* Lauded by Jonathan Franzen, E. L. Doctorow and many othersAn intimate portrayal of the drug wars in Colombia, f
  • rom international fiction star Juan Gabriel Vasquez.
  • Juan Gabriel Vásquez has been hailed not only as one of South America’s greatest literary stars, but also as one of the most acclaimed writers of his generation. In this New York Times-bestselling, award-winning, gorgeously wrought novel, Vásquez confronts the history of his home country, Colombia.
  • In the city of Bogotá, Antonio Yammara reads an article about a hippo that had escaped from a derelict zoo once owned by legendary Colombian drug kingpin Pablo Escobar. The article transports Antonio back to when the war between Escobar’s Medellín cartel and government forces played out violently in Colombia’s streets and in the skies above. Back then, Antonio witnessed a friend’s murder, an event that haunts him still. As he investigates, he discovers the many ways in which his own life and his friend’s family have been shaped by his country’s recent violent past. His journey leads him all the way back to the 1960s and a world on the brink of change: a time before narco-trafficking trapped a whole generation in a living nightmare.
  • Vásquez is “one of the most original new voices of Latin American literature,” according to Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa, and
  • The Sound of Things Falling
  • is his most personal, most contemporary novel to date, a masterpiece that takes his writing—and his literary star—even higher.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(465)
★★★★
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(388)
★★★
15%
(233)
★★
7%
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Read With Caution!

A Novelist Encounters the Perils of Mixing Fiction with Fact

Juan Gabriel Vasquez is a gifted novelist, blessed with a license to inextricably combine fact with fiction. While novelists seldom have fact-checkers, Alfaguara, a Spanish-language publishing house with headquarters in Madrid, has a moral—if not fiduciary responsibility to ensure that the central narrative of a novel which charges that Peace Corps volunteers initiated the drug trade in Colombia has elementary components of verifiable fact. A protagonist in The Sound of Things Falling is Mike, a Regional Coordinator of Peace Corps, supervising volunteers working in agriculture projects. Juan Gabriel’s depicts them as teaching peasant farmers how to cultivate marijuana. But those earnings produced only pocket change. Under Mike’s inspired leadership, volunteers then instruct farmers how to process coca leaf into paste and transport it by airplane to the United States, earning on a single flight “thirty million dollars”, thus launching the drug industry in Colombia. Ricardo, a local Colombian, is married to a volunteer. He serves as Mike’s pilot on drug runs into the U. S.

Subsequently, Ricardo is caught by the DEA and imprisoned. Mike then shows up dead, shot in the back of the neck, his naked body thrown face down on the riverbank. One can read into this that the drug cartel ratted on his pilot and took care of Mike to ensure the take-over and dominance of an expanding market.

A cursory search on Goggle by the publisher would have revealed the fact that no Peace Corps staff member was ever murdered in Colombia. Due to worsening security issues, Peace Corps left Colombia in 1981. For the remainder of that decade and into the 1990s, Colombia descended into a narco-state, an era infamously marked when unidentified forces launched a daylight assault on the Supreme Court in Bogota, murdering several sitting Justices on the bench.

While it is fact that there were volunteers working in agricultural projects in rural Colombia, it is a mythical transformation of their presence to believe that the indigenous people they worked with were in a suspended state of animation, breathlessly awaiting since pre-Inca times the arrival of complete foreigners to awaken them to a new knowledge of how to convert coca leaf from its centuries old use in religious ceremony to a secular application in lands so distant from their own as to lie beyond their imagination.

During the period 1961-81, some 4,300 Peace Corps Volunteers served in Colombia. There is no record of any of them ever being charged with drug processing or trafficking. All the good that they accomplished over these two decades can be undone through literary inadvertence. According to Mario Vargas Llosa, Juan Gabriel “is one of the most original new voices of Latin American literature”. While his narrative was limited to a small group of volunteers in ag projects, the powers of social media have now conflated that scope and erroneously applied it to Peace Corps as an institution. One Amazon reviewer recently wrote: “I had no idea Peace Corps was so integral in the growth of Colombia’s drug industry”.

Juan Gabriel is forceful in public comments that his work “is a reaction against magical realism”. If so, we will have to await another novel for that concept to manifest itself.

Jeremiah Norris
Washington, D. C.
Former Peace Corps Volunteer & Staff Member in Colombia
11 people found this helpful
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Love and Death in Colombia

I wanted to read something on Colombia for a recent trip there and I chose this, along with "Short Walks from Bogota," a non-fiction account of the present-day (circa 2012) country. I learned much from both books. Vasquez is clearly a writer of talent and Things Falling made me want to read more of his novels (in English, unfortunately). The book tells of a friendship begun in a Bogota pool hall interrupted by the shooting death of the legal professor-protagonist's friend. The rest of the book deals with the mystery about the reasons for the shooting and how the violence of Colombia's past still has consequences many years later. It gives a good feel for the dark years of the 1980s and 1990s, when the drug cartels were running rampant, and there is a great love story too. Happily, Colombia has changed for the better.
7 people found this helpful
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A meditation on remembering

There seems to be an unwritten rule that artists should not be critics (to include authors.) I disagree. So, let’s instead classify reviews by artists of other artists, as “Peer reviews”; required by other professions. Better? This novel gets high praise from official critiquedom (= NYTs; LATs; Time; Booklist; Publishers Weekly; Esquire, and so on) and yet in Bookclub ( a men’s club where books of merit are read) I had to defend this novel, even though I think it undeserving of the high praise it got from the professional critics.
What is it, The Sound of Things Falling; and, should you read it? Is it “A deep meditation on fate and death” as the NYT’s says? No, not so much. Is it about Drug traffic, male friendship, and suspense, as is indicated by the publisher? No, not so much. It is about remembering, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, young love, cross-cultural marriages & relationships, poverty, class structure, flying, and Columbia during the reign of Pablo Escobar, the famous drug lord of Columbia; written from the perspective of a man who grew up and lived through those times, the 1980’s of Columbia. It is somewhat confusing and struggles to define just what it is about, and the characters somewhat lame. I think the author is struggling himself to understand what it is and was that were his formative years – which is not a bad thing. In fact, it is a good thing. That’s one thing good fiction does – struggles to understand issues and circumstances that shape who we are. This book does that.
I found it easy to read. I read it in three sittings. I found it informative – about the times and the country. I didn’t particularly like the three main male characters. I found the woman more intriguing, more engaging. The structure of the story is told from the present (2009) to the short past (1996) to the further back past (1980s) to the still further back past (1938); back and forth for three generations – which is tricky to pull off because it deals with remembering and storytelling, fact and fiction, and that can get blurred, messy, and is subject to interpretation – by the characters, the recorders of history, as well as the author’s, which all adds up to confusion. Which is, of course, the essence of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (never named in the book.) The Sound of Things Falling, is a “deep meditation” on memory and remembering traumas, and how that can influence and effect the lives of persons. If that interests you – give this book a go.
Fall 2014
7 people found this helpful
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“The great thing about Colombia [is that] nobody’s ever alone with their fate.”

A novel so rich it is difficult to describe in anything less than superlatives, Colombian author Juan Gabriel Vasquez’s The Sound of Things Falling mesmerizes with its ideas and captivating literary style, while also keeping a reader on the edge of the chair with its unusual plot, fully developed characters, dark themes, and repeating images. Set in Colombia, the novel opens in Bogota in 2009, with Antonio Yamarra, a law professor, reading a newspaper story about a male hippopotamus which had escaped from the untended zoo belonging to former drug lord Pablo Escobar, who was shot and killed in 1993. The hippo, living free on the huge Escobar property in the many years since Escobar’s death, had eventually wreaked havoc in the surrounding countryside until it was shot and killed by a marksman. The fate of the hippo’s mate and baby, which had escaped with him, were then unknown.

The newspaper’s image of the slaughtered hippo brings back traumatic memories for Yamarra – real memories involving a former acquaintance, the late Ricardo Laverde, whom he had known for a few months in 1996, and more subtle images of a family destroyed and their possible connections to Colombia’s drug history. It is these memories which develop into the novel asYammara tells about meeting Ricardo Laverde over the billiards table after work in 1996. Gradually, he begins to learn a little more about this man, recently released after twenty years in jail, eventually discovering that Laverde used to be a pilot. This motif of flight, both real and emotional, permeates the novel.

Antonio Yammara’s relationship with Laverde is not benign. When Laverde is eventually shot, something the reader discovers in the early pages, Yammara is inadvertently involved, and he suffers physically and emotionally for several years in the aftermath. His suffering involves every aspect of his existence, including his relationship with his wife Aura and young daughter. Eventually, Yammara meets Laverde’s daughter Maya and learns more about the parallel story of Laverde, his wife Elaine, and their own daughter during the time of Escobar’s “reign.” The time then flashes back to the 1970s, giving breadth to the themes and the philosophical ideas about life, death, and fate, which the author illustrates throughout.

Exciting as a story about the drug world and its effects on Colombia’s history and on its people, the novel also gives Vasquez ample opportunity to develop his themes. “It’s always somewhat dreadful,” Yamarra explains, “when someone reveals to us the chain that has turned us into what we are; it’s always disconcerting to discover, when it’s another person who brings us the revelation, the slight or complete lack of control we have over our own experience.” And when “the saddest thing that can happen to a person is to find that their memories are lies,” and that the best conclusion that one can draw about the motivation of someone close to us is simply, “He must have done something,” then the whole point of Vasquez’s novel is as clear as “an object falling from the sky.”
5 people found this helpful
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Required reading to get to know Colombia better during the 1990s

Fundamental master piece of JGV to get to know better how it was to live in the 1990s Colombia, particularly in a Bogota sieged by drug cartels, political unrest, and rampant violence. After several years of magic realism, this novel represents the new generation of authors that present a fresher approach and a more down to earth - urban perspective from Colombian reality.
3 people found this helpful
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Deep and complex

The main characters are complex. The author skillfully draws readers to empathize with them even if they have never experienced similar situations.
1 people found this helpful
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Good novel. I read it on a trip to ...

Good novel. I read it on a trip to Colombia and found it insightful on Colombia during and after the drug wars..
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Great novel!

A great book. A must-read for an insiders view of Colombia. I couldn't put it down.
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Five Stars

Amazing book
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A compelling story told with great art

This is without question the best novel I've read in years, both for its compelling, important story and for its art in the telling. I've become impatient in recent years with American fiction that seems absorbed in the problems of the comfortably affluent. This was a fine antidote. The plot is complex, and the parts fit together seamlessly. Story elements inserted early turn out to have critical importance later on. Clearly, the book was carefully plotted in advance, but it unfolds naturally and unhurriedly, with careful attention to each stage in its unfolding. The author skillfully inserts details into settings--not too many--but with enough specificity to make a scene vivid and convincing. He doesn't lose track of plot threads. The characters are well drawn, and we care about them. It's clear why this won Spain's highly prestigious Alfaguara Prize. This was my first novel by this author; I'll certainly investigate his others.
1 people found this helpful