Reader, your life is full of choices. Some will bring you joy and others will bring you heartache. Will you choose to cheat (in life, the examination that follows) or will you choose to copy? Will you fall in love? If so, will you remember her name and the number of freckles on her back? Will you marry, divorce, annul? Will you leave your run-down neighbourhood, your long-suffering country and your family? Will you honour your dead, those you loved and those you didn't? Will you have a child, will you regret it? Will you tell them you regret it? Will you, when all's said and done, deserve a kick in the balls? Will you find, here, in this slender book, fictions that entertain and puzzle you? Fictions that reflect yourself back to you? Will you find yourself?
Relax, concentrate, dispel any anxious thoughts. Let the world around you settle and fade. Are you ready? Now turn over your papers, and begin.
Reader, your life is full of choices. Some will bring you joy and others will bring you heartache. Will you choose to cheat (in life, the examination that follows) or will you choose to copy? Will you fall in love? If so, will you remember her name and the number of freckles on her back? Will you marry, divorce, annul? Will you leave your run-down neighbourhood, your long-suffering country and your family? Will you honour your dead, those you loved and those you didn't? Will you have a child, will you regret it? Will you tell them you regret it? Will you, when all's said and done, deserve a kick in the balls? Will you find, here, in this slender book, fictions that entertain and puzzle you? Fictions that reflect yourself back to you? Will you find yourself?
Relax, concentrate, dispel any anxious thoughts. Let the world around you settle and fade. Are you ready? Now turn over your papers, and begin.
Completely unlike anything you've read before: this playful, poignant, genre-bending novel / entrance examination tells a story of copying, cheating, faking and messing-up
Alejandro Zambra is the author of the story collection My Documents, a finalist for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, and three previous novels: Ways of Going Home, The Private Lives of Trees, and Bonsai, which won Chile's Literary Critics' Award for Best Novel. His stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Harper's, Tin House, and McSweeney's, among others. In 2010, he was named one of Granta's Best Young Spanish-language Novelists.
This year I was very happy to discover Alejandro Zambra. His new
book, Multiple Choice, brilliantly translated from the Spanish by
Megan McDowell, manages to blend Oulipian poetry, funny-sad short
stories and choose-your-own-advevnture
*Observer*
To my mind, the best of what experimental fiction be
*Observer*
This is composition set in the key of fun - ironic, playful,
sometimes bitter. The translation by Megan McDowell skims across
the tricky terrain with grace and ease, capturing the comic
absurdities and dark moments without any apparent linguistic
stumble or pause... [Zambra has] a wonderfully seductive, ludic
charm. Multiple Choice will be embraced by Zambra's devoted
followers. Open-minded readers new to his quirky world could find
it opening doors. Multiple doors perhaps
*Spectator*
Brilliant... funny... part philosophical parody, part satire, this
is a highly original and poignant book
*Daily Telegraph*
A masterful act of transformation that turns the reader into
writer. Zambra gives us fragments, but he also gives us the
autonomy to shore them up into something new: our very own book
*Guardian*
Zambra builds an elegant structure out of the important elements of
life-competition, pride, vigor, death, sex-against a landscape of
political menace. Read his book and, as with all true art, you'll
be left wondering what it means but feeling that you know
*Preparation for the Next Life*
Multiple Choice is unlike anything I've ever encountered before.
With his test questions and answers, the incomparable Alejandro
Zambra creates verbal playgrounds for reverie, imagination,
thought, and memory, and leads you through labyrinthine corridors
in which you inevitably encounter yourself. Reading this book is a
wonderfully disconcerting and unforgettable experience
*Say Her Name*
I loved Multiple Choice. I hate exams, but I've sat this one a few
times already. I'd give it an A-. The minus for being too smart and
getting the fuck away with it
*Your Father Sends His Love*
There is no writer like Alejandro Zambra, no one as bold, as
subtle, as funny. Multiple Choice is his most accomplished work
yet, an apparently playful literary game you quickly realize is
also deadly serious. This book is not to be missed
*At Night We Walk In Circles*
As slim as Chile herself. As serrated and complex as her riddled
coastline. There's so much to admire and enjoy in this dazzling
little book
*Green Glowing Skull*
Brilliant... Like a literary exercise for the mind, but strangely
fun to decode. Keep yourself sharp with one of the most interesting
writers working right now'
*Elle*
When I read Zambra I feel like someone's shooting fireworks inside
my head. His prose is as compact as a grain of gunpowder, but its
allusions and ramifications branch out and illuminate even the most
remote corners of our minds
*The Story of My Teeth*
Falling in love with Zambra's literature is a fascinating road to
travel. Imaginative and original, he is a master of short forms; I
adore his devastating audacity
*The Illogic of Kassel*
Zambra is the defining light of today's Latin American literature -
an author whose cult is about to take over, the one we'll all be
congratulating ourselves on having known about in the early days,
before his deceptively slender masterpieces lay on ever American
reader's night table. Multiple Choice is the most daring
distillation yet of his inimitable, take-no-prisoners genius
*John Wray, author of The Lost Time Accidents*
I loved Multiple Choice. I hate exams, but I've sat this one a few
times already. I'd give it an A-. The minus for being too smart and
getting the fuck away with it.
*Your Father Sends His Love*
An experimental novella, written in the form of a multiple choice
examination... Brilliant, innovative, beautiful - David Markson's
Vanishing Point meets Junot Diaz's This Is How You Lost Her.
*Guardian*
A metatextual blast... the only real problem with this unusually
pleasurable exam is that it's over far too quickly
*Scotsman*
[Multiple Choice] blends fiction and memoir and messes
enthusiastically with form. It is funny, melancholy, surprising. It
is silly at times, profound at others. Its interactivity will
entertain you, and might just change the way you think about
fiction
*Guardian*
One of the books of 2016... Full of wit, spark, pathos and
insight... Multiple Choice goes beyond all expectations in terms of
originality... [It is] one of the most thought-provoking, original
and rewarding reads of the year... [as well as] a surprisingly
touching and immersive experience... Once I'd finished it the urge
to immediately read it again [was] pretty much irresistible. It was
even better the second time
*Big Issue*
Intriguing... [Multiple Choice] starts as comic wordplay but morphs
gradually into a volley of melancholy nano-stories... inventive in
form
*Observer*
Tantalising... Mordantly funny and highly arresting [...] with nods
to that great Latin American experimentalist Borges
*Daily Mail*
Zambra's field of enquiry overspills the historical and political.
It spreads far beyond Chilean borders and slips the bounds of
narrative to question the very idea of a single, correct and
definitive answer
*Sunday Herald*
Original and deeply moving
*Good Housekeeping*
Slowly, but surely, the questions and potential answers reveal
profound takes on life in Chile under the dictatorship of General
Augusto Pinochet - both funny and melancholic... For all the
plainness of the prose, read aloud this exercise and it almost
takes the form of a sonnet. It is also heartbreaking
*National*
Zambra offers a series of vignettes - even short stories by the end
- with multiple interpretations, or versions, layered on top of
each other
*davidsbookworld.com*
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