May 31st: Diego Gerard Morrison- Pages of Mourning

Presented by 192 Books and Paula Cooper Gallery, Diego Gerard Morrison in Conversation with Monica de la Torre
to discuss his new book Pages of Mourning (Two Dollar Radio, 2024)

 

This event will take place live at 192 Books at 192 10th Avenue, between 21st and 22nd avenue, on Friday, May 31st at 7:00 PM ET. Seating is on a first come, first served basis. The discussion will be streamed directly on this page. A recording will be archived.

 

Diego Gerard Morrison—Pages of Mourning: A Novel (Two Dollar Radio, 2024)

Pages of Mourning is a stunning achievement, a pioneering and inventive novel that confronts family history, creativity, Magical Realism, and the impact of violence from Mexico’s drug war, by a magnificent new talent in Diego Gerard Morrison.

It’s 2017 and the crisis of forced disappearances has reached a tipping point after 43 docent students disappeared and are feared dead. Aureliano Más the Second is a fledgling writer at a lucrative fellowship in Mexico City chaired by his aunt, Rose. When Aureliano was very young, his mother left without reason or trace. Aureliano is attempting to write a novel that mirrors his mother’s unexplained disappearance while shattering Magical Realism as a genre in the process. It doesn’t help though, that he’s named after the protagonist of a touchstone of the Magical Realist canon, and raised in the mythical town of Comala.

Aureliano searches for insight and closure from his father and from Rose, who grappled with his mother’s disappearance through a failed novel of her own. Their stories lead back to the 1980’s and the burgeoning drug trade, as Rose and Aureliano’s mother journey as young runaways throughout the Mexican countryside. Meanwhile, Aureliano’s addictions and the overwhelming burden of the past threaten his tenuous position at the fellowship, just as a deadly earthquake strikes Mexico City on the exact same date as a legendary earthquake struck in 1985.

Pages of Mourning is a daring, captivating, darkly funny novel that grapples with uncertainty and loss in a land of violence and superstition, while questioning whether Magical Realism as a genre is capable of confronting the brutal dissonance of a country that awaits the return of the missing while not wholly acknowledging their death. Monumental, lyrical, and engrossing, Pages of Mourning is a towering accomplishment by one of the most exciting new writers at work today.

Diego Gerard Morrison (Mexico City, 1984) is a writer, editor and translator whose recent work explores themes of Magical Realism and appropriation in the context of the Mexican drug war. He is the author of The Wait (John of the Thing Press, 2021) and Myth of Pterygium (Autumn House Press, 2022), and the cofounder and fiction editor of diSONARE, an editorial project based in Mexico City. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Brooklyn Rail, The Roanoke Review, The River Rail, Terremoto, Shifter, Precog Magazine, Bombay Gin and Boiler House Press, among others.

 

Photo by Nat Ward.

Mónica de la Torre's most recent book of poems and translations is Repetition Nineteen (Nightboat, 2020). Other collections include The Happy End/All Welcome (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2017)—a riff on a riff on Kafka's Amerika—and Public Domain (Roof Books, 2008). With Alex Balgiu, she co-edited the anthology Women in Concrete Poetry: 1959–79 (Primary Information, 2020). The recipient of the 2022 Foundation for Contemporary Arts C.D. Wright Award for Poetry and a 2022 Creative Capital grant, she teaches at Brooklyn College.

 
 
 
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June 4th: Michael Peppiatt —Francis Bacon, A Self-Portrait in Words and Giacometti in Paris

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May 28th: Kit Schluter- Cartoons