A brilliant new comic novel from a linguistic virtuoso (Jos Antonio Aguado, Diari de Terrassa) It\'s the 1980s in Lagos de Moreno--a town where there are more cows than people, and more priests than cows--and a poor family struggles to overcome the bizarre dangers of living in Mexico.
A brilliant new comic novel from a linguistic virtuoso (Jos Antonio Aguado, Diari de Terrassa) It\'s the 1980s in Lagos de Moreno--a town where there are more cows than people, and more priests than cows--and a poor.
Both profoundly moving and wildly funny, Mexican author Juan Pablo Villalobos\'s Quesadillas is a satiric masterpiece, chock-full of inseminated cows, Polish immigrants, religious pilgrims, alien spacecraft, psychedelic watermelons, and many, many your mama insults.
This political upheaval is only the beginning of Orestes\'s adventures and his uproarious crusade against the boredom of rustic life and the tyranny of his older brother.
Confined to their home, the family bears witness to the revolt against the Institutional Revolutionary Party and their umpteenth electoral fraud.
The father, a high-school civics teacher, insists on practicing and teaching the art of the insult, while the mother prepares hundreds of Quesadillas to serve to their numerous progeny: Aristotle, Orestes, Archilochus, Callimachus, Electra, Castor, and Pollux.
A brilliant new comic novel from a linguistic virtuoso (Jos Antonio Aguado, Diari de Terrassa) It\'s the 1980s in Lagos de Moreno--a town where there are more cows than people, and more priests than cows--and a poor family struggles to overcome the bizarre dangers of living in Mexico.
Both profoundly moving and wildly funny, Mexican author Juan Pablo Villalobos\'s Quesadillas is a satiric masterpiece, chock-full of inseminated cows, Polish immigrants, religious pilgrims, alien spacecraft, psychedelic watermelons, and many, many your mama insults.
This political upheaval is only the beginning of Orestes\'s adventures and his uproarious crusade against the boredom of rustic life and the tyranny of his older brother.
Confined to their home, the family bears witness to the revolt against the Institutional Revolutionary Party and their umpteenth electoral fraud.
The father, a high-school civics teacher, insists on practicing and teaching the art of the insult, while the mother prepares hundreds of Quesadillas to serve to their numerous progeny: Aristotle, Orestes, Archilochus, Callimachus, Electra, Castor, and Pollux.
A brilliant new comic novel from a linguistic virtuoso (Jos Antonio Aguado, Diari de Terrassa) It\'s the 1980s in Lagos de Moreno--a town where there are more cows than people, and more priests than cows--and a poor family struggles to overcome the bizarre dangers of living in Mexico