
Montano's Malady -- Enrique Vila-Matas, Paperback
Product Tags:
Dalkey Archive Press, Enrique Vila-Matas, Epistolary, Fiction, Fiction - General, Literary, Paperback, Spain, World LiteratureShortlisted for the inaugural Warwick Prize for Writing
A dazzlingly original exploration of literature's limits-and its necessity--Montano's Malady is Enrique Vila-Matas at his most mischievous, self-referential, and intellectually provocative.
Both the narrator of Montano's Malady, Joséeacute;, and his son, Montano, suffer from literary illnesses: Montano has writer's block and José can only experience the world as literature. The search for a "cure" leads José around a world that is constantly mediated by his thoughts about writers and literature--from Cervantes to Sternea and Kafka to Sebald, among countless other literary touchstones--as he blends fiction and essay, memoir and criticism, with dizzying brilliance.
A sequel of sorts to Bartleby & Co., Montano's Malady is both a love letter to literature and a lament for its diminished place in the modern world.
Author: Enrique Vila-Matas
Publisher: Dalkey Archive Press
Published: 06/24/2025
Pages: 255
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.77lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.67d
ISBN: 9781628976113
About the Author
Enrique Vila-Matas was born in Barcelona in 1948, and is the author of more than twenty works of fiction, including Bartleby & Co, Never Any End to Paris (about the time he spent living with Marguerite Duras and working on his first, as of yet untranslated, novel), Dublinesque, Mac's Problem (finalist for the International Man Booker), The Illogic of Kassel, and Vampire in Love. He is a Knight of the Legion of Honor from France and has won the prize city of Barcelona and the Romulo Gallegos (2001), the Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger and Fernando Aguirre-Libralire (2002), the Herralde prize, the National Critics, the Prix Medicis-étranger, the prize of Critics Circle Chile (2003), the Premio Internazionale Ennio Flaiano (2006), José Manuel Lara Foundation Award 2006, the prize of the Royal Spanish Academy 2006. In September 2007 he won the literary prize Elsa Morante Scrittori del Mondo, which is awarded "to an important foreign author."
Jonathan Dunne was born in Kingston-upon-Thames, England, in 1968 and studied Classics at Oxford University. He is director of the publishing house Small Stations Press. He translates from Bulgarian, Catalan, Galician and Spanish into English.