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Review: The Informers

Thanks, Dad, for the rotten book review

April 2, 2009 13:28
Juan Gabriel Vásquez:  clever and subtle

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By Juan Gabriel Vásquez (Trans: Anne McLean)
Bloomsbury, £7.99

When Gabriel Santoro, a young journalist, publishes his first book, it is well received except for one reviewer who savages it — his father. The father is a distinguished professor and lawyer and he does not just take against his son’s book. He hates it. Clearly, the son has crossed some line. But what is it?

This is the first of several mysteries in The Informers, a novel by the young Colombian writer, Juan Gabriel Vásquez. Young Santoro sets out to find out what crime he has committed and, as he draws back layer after layer, he finds the answer is buried in his father’s past, in an act of betrayal that ruined several lives.

Young Santoro’s book, A Life in Exile, tells the life story of Sara Guterman, an old family friend and Jewish refugee who escaped from Nazi Germany and came with her family to start a new life in South America. The book within which this book exists, The Informers, moves between modern-day Colombia and the 1940s when, under pressure from the United States, Colombia introduced a blacklist for Nazi sympathisers. The blacklist was “a sort of civil death: the impossibility of carrying out any economic activity whatsoever.” Families were ruined, including the family of Konrad Deresser, a German refugee who has never adjusted to his new life in exile. But how did an innocent refugee, struggling to run a small glass-making factory, fall into ruin? And what could this have to do with Sara Guterman and Santoro’s father?