Nothing is as it seems, says Teo, who, in keeping with this phrase, conceals his own name. He is 27 years old, still lives with his mother, suffers from a mild form of lupus and worships Lenny Bruce. Shut up in his tiny room, he practices escapism until one day the rain drives him into a bar, where he meets Lena. A prestigious lawyer, rich and sagacious, she sets the ball rolling on a complex train of events. Her presence brings an almost unbearable force to Teo’s monotonous existence. The result is an intricate labyrinth, evoking Kafka, Beckett and other masters of the absurd. In elegant, expressive prose Medina takes us to the most intimate corners of filial love, creative obsession and eroticism.
Links:
[1] http://217.160.225.169/node/12792
[2] http://217.160.225.169/node/12793
[3] mailto:victor@antoniakerrigan.com