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Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter. Mario Vargas Llosa
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Betty
(last edited Aug 26, 2011 09:58PM)
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Aug 26, 2011 09:55PM

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In Chapter 3, Vargas Llosa turns back to the narrator Mario of Radio Panamericana, who misses some commitments due to his getting to know the eccentric Bolivian Pedro Camacho of Radio Central and his forgetting the passing time. One of these missed events is his movie with Aunt Julia.
Mario and a colleague Javier attend a seance, at which...(you'll find out).
The chapter's highlight is Uncle Lucho's fiftieth birthday, celebrated at Bolívar Grill...

As I read the sequence of chapters, new characters and plots abruptly cropped up. My patience was rewarded with the discovery that these stories were the radio serials, the rage among Lima's female listeners, interspersed with the Mario/Aunt Julia story. Apparently, they were quite good, not only because the scriptwriter (Pedro Camacho), whose direction earned the actor's respect and reverence, but the sound effects as well, which Vargas Llosa describes in chapter 5. One of them in this book is "The Adventures and Misadventures of Don Alberto de Quinteros". These shows are part of another era in radio listening.

Mario and Aunt Julia visit the Bolivian scriptwriter Pedro Camacho's tiny room in a once-luxurious bldg, getting to know more about how the famous radio serials dramatist, workaholic, and female listeners' heartthrob keeps writing fresh material day after day--...to live was to write and an eccentric schedule.
Another radio drama follows, this about Don Federico Téllez Unzátegui, who develops a lifelong mania for rodent extermination into a successful business after a horrifying experience in his youth. The rebellious next generation doesn't see it the same way.
Back to Mario--nineteen years old, law student, radio news editor, and short story writer--who's plans to write "Dangerous Games" from hearing about boys who are levitated momentarily off the ground as an airplane takes off.
Another radio serial, this one about how Lucho Abril Marroquin, a "medical detail man" (visits pharmacists and doctors with Bayer Laboratory samples), whose territory is Peru, meets with a disaster that scars him psychically. Body cured, but mind still unsettled and consequently his newly married life disrupted, he follows the zany recommendations of Dr Lucía Acémila to cure his phobias.



Finally, Vargas Llosa ties the two plots--Mario's romance with Aunt Julia and his depiction of Pedro Camacho, the verbena-mint-tea-drinking Bolivian scriptwriter who produces more mixed up radio serials and exponentially drives up listener ratings.
Memorable parts of this novel are Mario and Aunt Julia trying to get married and Camacho's gripping dramas.
Books mentioned in this topic
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Julia Urquidi Illanes (other topics)Mario Vargas Llosa (other topics)