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The Way Out

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From Argentine literary powerhouse Ricardo Piglia, The Way Out is "an offbeat take on the campus novel, full of sex, intrigue, and marginalia" (Kirkus Reviews) that probes the lengths we go to hide our own truths and to uncover the secrets of others.

In the mid 1990s Emilio Renzi leaves his unstable life in Argentina to take a visiting position at a prestigious university in New Jersey. Settling in for a semester of academic quietude, he is unexpectedly swept up in a secret romance with his colleague, the brilliant and enigmatic Ida Brown. But their clandestine relationship is cut brutally short by an apparent tragic car accident. Discontented with the police's lackluster inquiries into Ida's death, Renzi begins his own investigation.

His suspicions are piqued as details emerge about a bizarre string of attacks targeting scientists and researchers. Then a radical manifesto appears in the press threatening continued violence. As he delves deeper into Ida Brown's past, Renzi discovers a link between her and the terrorist that sets him on a path of no return: he must discover once and for all whether her death was part of a larger pattern and, if so, whether she was a victim or accomplice. Renzi's quest for truth exposes a darker side of humanity that will force him to confront the systems and culture that could produce such a misguided killer.


Praise for The Way Out:

"An offbeat take on the campus novel, full of sex, intrigue, and marginalia."

—Kirkus Reviews

Praise for The Diaries of Emilio Renzi:

"Splendidly crafted and interspliced with essays and stories, this beguiling work is to a diary as Piglia is to "Emilio Renzi": a lifelong alter ego, a highly self-conscious shadow volume that brings to bear all of Piglia's prowess as it illuminates his process of critical reading and the inevitable tensions between art and life. Amid meeting redheads at bars, he dissects styles and structures with a surgeon's precision, turning his gaze on a range of writers, from Plato to Dashiell Hammett, returning time and again to Pavese, Faulkner, Dostoyevsky, Arlt and Borges. Chock-full of lists of books and films he consumed in those voracious early years of call girls, carbon paper, amphetamines and Heidegger, this is an embarrassment of riches — by turns an inspiring master class in narrative analysis, an accounting of the pesos left in his pockets and a novel of Piglia's grandfather (named Emilio, natch) with his archive of World War I materials pilfered from Italian corpses.... No previous familiarity with Piglia's work is needed to appreciate these bibliophilic diaries, adroitly repurposed through a dexterous game of representation and masks that speaks volumes of the role of the artist in society, the artist in his time, the artist in his tradition."

—Mara Faye Lethem, The New York Times Book Review

"For the past few years, every Latin American novelist I know has been telling me how lavish, how grand, how transformative was the Argentinian novelist Ricardo Piglia's final project, a fictional journal in three volumes, Los diarios de Emilio Renzi—Renzi being Piglia's fictional alter ego. And now here at last is the first volume in English, The Diaries of Emilio Renzi: Formative Years, translated by Robert Croll. It's something to be celebrated... [It] offer[s] one form of resistance to encroaching fascism: style."

—Adam Thirlwell, BookForum, The Best Books of 2017

"[A] masterpiece.... everything written by Ricardo Piglia, which we read as intellectual fabrications and...

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    • Booklist

      August 1, 2020
      In the early years of the Clinton administration, we find Piglia's literary alter ego, Emilio Renzi, in New Jersey, teaching a course at prestigious Taylor University. Including evocative, Updikean descriptions of American suburbia, this is an unusual mystery novel in which Renzi faces odd occurrences: a disconcerting late-night phone call offering him drugs, a colleague with a pet shark, and his colleague, Ida Brown's, insistence on maintaining absolute secrecy regarding their romantic relationship. When Ida suddenly dies, Renzi becomes obsessed with uncovering the truth of her violent end. What follows is a fascinating exploration of a character based on the Unabomber. Piglia captures the confusing sense of wonderment and bafflement that academics felt when considering the actions of that man, his manifesto, and the fallout of his capture. With his trademark mixture of autobiography and fiction, reminiscent of Ben Lerner, Sheila Heti, and Rachel Cusk, Piglia explores themes similar to those of Don DeLillo's Mao II (1991), regarding the connection between art and violence, in this thoughtful, slight, and mesmeric crime novel by a giant of innovative literature.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2020
      The late Argentine writer and Princeton professor continues his Emilio Renzi cycle of novels. Renzi, an investigator-turned-novelist, returns as a visiting professor of literature at a leafy college in New Jersey while researching the Argentina-born British novelist W.H. Hudson. There he meets Ida Brown, a combative academic superstar who imagines herself outside the system while actually being the system: "Her salary was a state secret," writes Piglia, "but it was said that they raised it every six months and that her sole condition was that she must earn one hundred dollars more than the highest-paid male (that's not what she called them) in her profession." Ida is working on Joseph Conrad, a friend of Hudson's, and warns Renzi to stay away from her intellectual territory. Naturally, they fall into bed together, hiding their tryst by publicly pretending that nothing is going on. Everything comes full circle: Renzi is "interested in writers who were tied to some double identity, bound up in two languages and two traditions," just as he himself is--and as Ida is, and the Russian widow across the hall, and other players in the novel. Things take an unanticipated bad turn when Ida dies, the victim of a letter bomb, which brings out the investigator in Renzi. He himself comes under suspicion, grilled by detectives, one of whom tells him grimly, "Nothing is irrelevant under these circumstances." Whodunit? Conrad's novel The Secret Agent figures in a sidelong way while the perp is a failed scholar of Dostoyevsky-an cast whom Renzi visits in prison: "When he moved, his footsteps clinked with a gloomy sound; he was detained, and for the first time the word took on its full meaning for me." It's all very bookish. The resolution of the story is nicely indefinite, though Piglia's appropriation of the Unabomber and his manifesto seems a touch obvious, as are the faint echoes of Stieg Larsson. An offbeat take on the campus novel, full of sex, intrigue, and marginalia.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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