A Question of Belonging
Crónicas
by Hebe Uhart
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Pub Date 28 May 2024 | Archive Date 14 Apr 2024
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Description
25 Crónicas – uniquely Latin American short stories – from a master of the form, a star heralded alongside Samanta Schweblin and Mariana Enríquez for blending insight, honesty, and humor
Uhart reinvigorates our desire to connect with other people, to love the world, to laugh in the face of bad intentions, and to look again, more closely: from lapwings, road-side pedicures, and the overheard conversations of nurses and their patients, to Goethe and the work of the Bolivian director Jorge Sanjinés.
“It was a year of great discovery for me, learning about these people and their homes,” Hebe Uhart writes in the opening story of A Question of Belonging, a collection of texts that traverse Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil, Spain, and beyond. Discoveries sprout and flower throughout Uhart’s oeuvre, but nowhere more so than in her crónicas, Uhart’s preferred method of storytelling by the end of her life. For Uhart, the crónica meant going outside, meeting others. It also allowed the mingling of precise, factual reportage and the slanted, symbolic narrative power of literature.
Here, Uhart opens the door on all kinds of people. We meet an eccentric priest who conducts experiments down by the riverside hoping to land on a cure for cancer; a queenly (read: beautiful and relentlessly indolent) teenage girl; a cacique of the Pueblo Nación Charrúa clan, who tells her of indigenous customs and histories.
She writes with characteristic slyness. In the last lines of the title story, Uhart writes, “And I left, whistling softly.” Wherever she may have gone, we are left with the wish we could follow alongside.
Advance Praise
"Over a career spanning five decades, Uhart published nearly two dozen stories, novels, travelogues, and tales, all of which exude the author’s characteristically bright insight and sense of attentive amusement . . . Vilner’s thoughtful translation does much-deserved justice to Uhart’s cleareyed, boundless curiosity. An exemplary compendium of brief glimpses into the quotidian concerns of everyday South Americans." — Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"There is a way to capture the movements of reality, without a violent fight, that's nevertheless powerful. With her singular voice, Hebe Uhart is constantly seen, heard and present in her crónicas, and yet there's a grace in the way she occupies the space she's meditating upon; she is at once too vast and too small for autobiography. Anna Vilner's translation is eloquently luminous." — Claudia Durastanti, author of Strangers I Know
"If Hebe Uhart had to be characterized in one way, it would be by her complete lack of pretension and artificiality, by her extreme discomfort when asked to carry out the rituals of the consecrated writer." — Mariana Enríquez, author of Our Share of Night and Things We Lost in the Fire
"Seemingly naïve but tremendously sharp, Hebe Uhart’s vision is one that could belong to a child, but a child who has up her sleeve the reflective tools of an adult." — Alejandra Costamagna, The Paris Review
"Paul Klee famously described drawing as taking a line for a walk and the stories of Hebe Uhart share that spirit, that magic. Deceptively simple, also philosophical, Uhart's work is brilliant and companionable." — Rivka Galchen, author of Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781953861801 |
PRICE | US$22.00 (USD) |
PAGES | 230 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Thank you NetGalley for the ARC.
I so enjoyed reading the short stories by Hebe Uhart! Hebe’s ways of narrating these short stories is such of bluntness, character and humor.
I could feel Hebe retelling the stories with such “Bah” and enthusiasm!
My favorites were: “I didn’t know”, “Off To Mexico”, “Good Manners”.
These were some cozy readings and you can pick up your pace and read it as you please. In my case, I read it in one go as I’m a little bit “chismosa” sometimes, ha!
Presented in a form almost unheard of in the English speaking world, Uhart's collecton of crónicas is an urgent and valuable glimpse into a world beyond the hegemony of the west. Capturing in bright, seamless prose the intricacies of Latin American culture and history and contemporary politics, this collection is a treat.