The Blue Hour

The Blue Hour

by Alonso Cueto (Author)

Synopsis

Can a son be forgiven for the sins of his father? Adrian Ormache is a prosperous lawyer living in Lima. He has the perfect life: a great career, beautiful wife, two doting and intelligent daughters. But when his mother dies a series of events devastate his entire view of the past, his parents, and his country. Adrian's mother leaves a letter indicating that she was being blackmailed. Confused, Adrian talks to his brother, who tells him that their long dead father Colonel Ormache, who led military operations against the 'Shining Path' guerrillas during the terrible Peruvian Civil War of the 1980's, was not quite the hero Adrian had always considered him to be: he routinely had POWs and civilian women raped, tortured and executed. His mother's blackmailer is revealed to be one of the Colonel's former subordinates. When Adrian confronts him the man gives him the name of the one prisoner whom the Colonel spared and kept as a lover - Miriam. Adrian becomes obsessed with finding Miriam. His search is cathartic and all-consuming, a journey that takes him into a country that is a far-cry from the stable, civilised Lima he's used to, a people still haunted by a harrowing, ongoing war, and some truths about his family - and himself - that he could never have imagined.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: William Heinemann
Published: 07 Jun 2012

ISBN 10: 0434019410
ISBN 13: 9780434019410
Book Overview: A stunning, prizewinning novel exploring the aftermath of the Peruvian Civil War, by one of the greatest living South American writers.

Media Reviews
The Blue Hour is a magnificent novel that describes ten years of civil war and terrorism with lucidity and resonant fantasy. Mario Vargas Llosa One of the major novelists of his generation. Diario de Tarragona Alonso Cueto's fine, prize-winning debut novel stands in that tradition...the conflation of Adrian's personal trauma with his nation's dark history is beautifully, delicately done. Financial Times Peruvian writer Alonso Cueto is one of the novelists spearheading his country's literary renaissance, drawing on the aftermath of Peru's devastating civil war to do so. Metro As absorbing for its sketches of Lima as for its story, this is a primer for both a nascent Latin American genre and a place dealing with near-history's horrors. Monocle
Author Bio
Born in Lima, Peru, in 1954, Alonso Cueto spent his childhood in Paris and Washington, returning to Lima at the age of seven. He studied literature at the Universidad Catolica del Peru and later at the University of Texas, Austin. In 1985 he married Kristin Keenan Atwood, with whom he has two children. He lives in Lima.