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2016 International Longlist
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A General Theory of Oblivion by José Eduardo Agualusa
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Maxwell
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Mar 14, 2016 07:19PM

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One interesting feature to me was how the different stories and characters proved to be linked. A chapter documenting one such link is entitled "the subtle architecture of chance", but in practice the connections multiply to an extent that they rather stretch the reader's credence, culminating in a brief set piece scene where they all, somehow, coincidentally arrive simultaneously at the central characters apartment.
The coincidences are so exaggerated that one assumes Agualusa did this for deliberate artistic effect: as one character notes ""A man with a good story is practically a king."

One interesting feature to me was how the different stories and characters proved to be ..."
I agree: it did feel a bit odd when all the characters arrived in the same place at the same time, but, like you, I assumed this was deliberate and I decided to go with it (probably because I was enjoying the book overall).

Also, very interesting to see how Agualusa was able to navigate through different cultures... Loved seeing the references to Brazilian culture.


