Although known for his novels,
novellas, and short stories, Bolaño was a prolific poet of free verse and prose poems. Bolaño saw himself primarily as a poet, as a character states in
The Savage Detectives, "Poetry is more than enough for me, although sooner or later I'm bound to commit the vulgarity of writing stories." In rapid succession, he published a series of critically acclaimed works, the most important of which are the novel
Los detectives salvajes (
The Savage Detectives), the novella
Nocturno de Chile (
By Night in Chile), and, posthumously, the novel
2666. His two collections of short stories
Llamadas telefónicas and
Putas asesinas were awarded literary prizes. In 2009 a number of unpublished novels were discovered among the author's papers.
Novels and novellas The Skating Rink The Skating Rink (
La pista de hielo in Spanish) is set in the seaside town of Z, on the
Costa Brava, north of
Barcelona and is told by three male narrators while revolving around a beautiful figure-skating champion, Nuria Martí. When she is suddenly dropped from the Olympic team, a pompous but besotted civil servant secretly builds a skating rink in a local ruin of a mansion, using public funds. But Nuria has affairs, provokes jealousy, and the skating rink becomes a crime scene.
Nazi Literature in the Americas Nazi Literature in the Americas (
La literatura Nazi en América in Spanish) is an entirely fictitious, ironic encyclopedia of fascist Latin American and American writers and critics, blinded to their own mediocrity and sparse readership by passionate self-mythification. While this is a risk that literature generally runs in Bolaño's works, these characters stand out by force of the intended heinousness of their political philosophy. Published in 1996, the events of the book take place from the late 19th century up to 2029. The last portrait was expanded into a novel in
Distant Star.
Distant Star Distant Star (
Estrella distante in Spanish) is a novella nested in the politics of the
Pinochet regime, concerned with murder, photography and even poetry blazed across the sky by the smoke of air force planes. This dark satirical work deals with the history of Chilean politics in a morbid and sometimes humorous fashion.
The Savage Detectives The Savage Detectives (
Los detectives salvajes in Spanish) has been compared by
Jorge Edwards to
Julio Cortázar's
Rayuela and
José Lezama Lima's
Paradiso. In a review in
El País, the Spanish critic and former literary editor of said newspaper
Ignacio Echevarría declared it "the novel that
Borges would have written." (Bolaño often expressed his love for Borges and Cortázar's work, and once concluded an overview of contemporary
Argentinian literature by saying that "one should read Borges more.") "Bolaño's genius is not just the extraordinary quality of his writing, but also that he does not conform to the paradigm of the Latin American writer", said Echeverría. "His writing is neither magical realism, nor baroque nor localist, but an imaginary, extraterritorial mirror of Latin America, more as a kind of state of mind than a specific place." The central section of
The Savage Detectives presents a long, fragmentary series of reports about the trips and adventures of Arturo Belano, a consonantly named alter-ego of Bolaño, who also appears in other stories & novels, and Ulises Lima, between 1976 and 1996. These trips and adventures, narrated by 52 characters, take them from
Mexico City to
Israel, Paris,
Barcelona, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Vienna and finally to
Liberia during
its civil war in the mid-nineties. The reports are sandwiched at the beginning and end of the novel by the story of their quest to find Cesárea Tinajero, the founder of "real visceralismo", a Mexican avant-garde literary movement of the twenties, set in late 1975 and early 1976, and narrated by the aspiring 17-year-old poet García Madero, who tells us first about the poetic and social scene around the new "visceral realists" and later closes the novel with his account of their escape from Mexico City to the state of
Sonora. Bolaño called
The Savage Detectives "a love letter to my generation." In his essay “Los detectives salvajes: Bolaño contra el Bildungsroman”, Peruvian writer
Gunter Silva Passuni interprets
The Savage Detectives as an inverted
Bildungsroman. According to Silva, the novel subverts the traditional coming-of-age narrative: instead of leading its protagonists toward maturity and integration, it traces their drift into fragmentation and loss. The search for the missing poet Cesárea Tinajero functions, in Silva's view, “less as a plot than as a void,” structuring the story around what cannot be found. Silva argues that what ultimately endures is not literary accomplishment but the sense of fraternity among the “real visceralists”. Literature, he suggests, is experienced as friendship and pursuit rather than as completed artistic work. The figure of Tinajero thus symbolizes an unattainable, essential form of literature—“something lost, impossible to fix or canonize.” Consequently, Silva describes the novel as “an epic of failure,” where the true essence of literature resides not in finished books but in the act of seeking them and in the communities formed through that search.
Amulet Amulet (
Amuleto in Spanish) focuses on the Uruguayan poet Auxilio Lacouture, who also appears in
The Savage Detectives as a minor character trapped in a bathroom at the
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) in Mexico City for two weeks while the army storms the school. The narrative unfolds amid the political and intellectual upheaval of 1968, a year marked by widespread student protests across Mexican universities that ultimately culminated in the army's massacre of hundreds of students in Tlatelolco Square, Mexico City, on October 2. In this short novel, she runs across a host of Latin American artists and writers, among them Arturo Belano, Bolaño's alter ego. Unlike
The Savage Detectives,
Amulet stays in Auxilio's first-person voice, while still allowing for the frenetic scattering of personalities Bolaño is known for. The scholar Ángel Díaz Miranda, in a review of Amulet, established a continuum between Bolano's novel and
Elena Poniatowska’s
The Night of Tlatelolco (
La noche de Tlatelolco in Spanish
), a seminal work on the student protests of 1968.
By Night in Chile By Night in Chile (
Nocturno de Chile in Spanish), is a narrative constructed as the loose, uneditorialised deathbed rantings of a Chilean
Opus Dei priest and failed poet, Sebastián Urrutia Lacroix. At a crucial point in his career, Father Urrutia is approached by two agents of
Opus Dei, who inform him that he has been chosen to visit Europe to study the preservation of old churches – the perfect job for a cleric with artistic sensitivities. On his arrival, he is told that the major threat to European cathedrals is pigeon droppings, and that his Old World counterparts have devised a clever solution to the problem. They have become falconers, and in town after town he watches as the priests' hawks viciously dispatch flocks of harmless birds. Chillingly, the
Jesuit's failure to protest against this bloody means of
architectural preservation signals to his employers that he will serve as a passive accomplice to the predatory and brutal methods of the Pinochet regime. This is the beginning of Bolano's indictment of "l'homme intellectuel" ("intellectual man") who retreats into art, using
aestheticism as a cloak and shield while the world lies around him, nauseatingly unchanged, perennially unjust and cruel. This book represents Bolaño's views upon returning to Chile and finding a haven for the consolidation of power structures and human rights violations. It is important to note that this book was originally going to be called
Tormenta de Mierda (
Shit Storm in English) but was convinced by
Jorge Herralde and
Juan Villoro to change the name.
Antwerp Antwerp is considered by his literary executor
Ignacio Echevarría The back of the first
New Directions edition of the book contains a quote from Bolaño about
Antwerp: "The only novel that doesn't embarrass me is
Antwerp."
2666 2666 was published in 2004, reportedly as a first draft submitted to his publisher after his death. The text of
2666 was the major preoccupation of the last five years of his life when his health sharply declined due to his liver problems. At more than 1,100 pages (898 pages in the English-language edition), the novel is divided into five "parts". Focused on the mostly unsolved and still ongoing
serial murders of the fictional Santa Teresa (based on
Ciudad Juárez),
2666 depicts the horror of the 20th century through a wide cast of characters, including police officers, journalists, criminals, and four academics on a quest to find the secretive, German writer
Benno von Archimboldi—who also resembles Bolaño himself. In 2008, the book won the
National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. The award was accepted by
Natasha Wimmer, the book's translator. In March 2009,
The Guardian newspaper reported that an additional Part 6 of
2666 was among papers found by researchers going through Bolaño's
literary estate.
The Third Reich The Third Reich (
El Tercer Reich in Spanish) was written in 1989 but only discovered among Bolaño's papers after he died. It was published in Spanish in 2010 and in English in 2011. The protagonist is Udo Berger, a German
wargame champion. With his girlfriend Ingeborg he goes back to the small town on the
Costa Brava where he spent his childhood summers. He plays a game of
Rise and Decline of the Third Reich with a stranger.
Woes of the True Policeman Woes of the True Policeman (
Los sinsabores del verdadero policía in Spanish) was first published in Spanish in 2011 and in English in 2012. The novel has been described as offering readers plot lines and characters that supplement or propose variations on Bolaño's novel
2666.
Short story collections Last Evenings on Earth Last Evenings on Earth (From
Llamadas telefónicas and
Putas Asesinas in Spanish) is a collection of fourteen short stories narrated by a host of different voices primarily in the first person. A number are narrated by an author, "B.", who is – in a move typical of the author – a stand-in for the author himself.
The Return The Return is a collection of twelve short stories, first published in English in 2010, and translated by Chris Andrews. It includes the stories from Spanish-language collections
Llamadas Telefonicas and
Putas Asesinas not published in
Last Evenings on Earth.
The Insufferable Gaucho The Insufferable Gaucho (
El gaucho insufrible in Spanish) collects a disparate variety of work. It contains five short stories and two essays, with the title story inspired by
Argentinian author
Jorge Luis Borges's short story "
The South," said story being mentioned in Bolaño's work.
The Secret of Evil The Secret of Evil (
El secreto del mal in Spanish) is a collection of short stories and recollections or essays. The Spanish version was published in 2007 and contains 21 pieces, 19 of which appear in the English edition, published in 2010. Several of the stories in the collection feature characters that have appeared in previous works by Bolaño, including his alter ego
Arturo Belano and characters that first appeared in
Nazi Literature in the Americas.
Poems The Romantic Dogs The Romantic Dogs (
Los perros románticos in Spanish), published in 2006, is his first collection of poetry to be translated into English, appearing in a bilingual edition in 2008 under New Directions and translated by Laura Healy. Bolaño has stated that he considered himself first and foremost a poet and took up fiction writing primarily later in life in order to support his children.
The Unknown University A deluxe edition of Bolaño's complete poetry,
The Unknown University, was translated from Spanish by Laura Healy (Chile, New Directions, 2013). It was shortlisted for the 2014
Best Translated Book Award. == Themes ==