The Large Glass
<div>In three separate autobiographies, celebrated Mexican innovator Mario Bellatin recounts his childhood trauma as a bathhouse spectacle, the treatment of an illness suffered by his Sufi spiritual mentor, and his complicated search for a quality second-hand Renault 5.<br><BR>Bellatin has already delivered a laugh-out-loud satirical biography of a reclusive (and fictional) Japanese author with 2013's novel, <I>Shiki Nagaoka: A Nose for Fiction</I>. Reversing the gaze, Bellatin now examines perhaps his most complicated, and least reliable, subject: himself.<BR><BR>Like the Duchamp sculpture from which it takes its name, Mario Bellatin’s <I>The Large Glass</I> deconstructs the very form it embraces, revealing the artifice of the autobiographical genre, while celebrating - with wit and raunchy humor - the importance of the stories we tell about ourselves. Another entry in English that further solidifies Mario Bellatin as one of Latin America's most important living writers.</div>