Lost City Radio

Lost City Radio - Daniel Alarcón

A powerful and searing novel of three lives fractured by a civil war For ten years, Norma has been the voice of consolation for a people broken by violence. She hosts Lost City Radio, the most popular program in their nameless South American country, gripped in the aftermath of war. Every week, the Indians in the mountains and the poor from the barrios listen as she reads the names of those who have gone missing, those whom the furiously expanding city has swallowed. Loved ones are reunited and the lost are found. Each week, she returns to the airwaves while hiding her own personal loss: her husband disappeared at the end of the war. But the life she has become accustomed to is forever changed when a young boy arrives from the jungle and provides a clue to the fate of her long-missing husband. Stunning, timely, and absolutely mesmerizing, Lost City Radio probes the deepest questions of war and its meaning: from its devastating impact on a society transformed by violence to the emotional scarring each participant, observer, and survivor carries for years after. This tender debut marks Alarcn's emergence as a major new voice in American fiction.

Published: 2007-01-30 (Harper)

ISBN: 9780060594794

Language: English

Format: Hardcover, 272 pages

Goodreads' rating: -

Reviews

Mead rated it

This book emphasizes the meaninglessness of war. Those who fight as well as those left behind are all tragic victims who suffer. This is a thought provoking book, esp in our present days of Arab spring, conflicts, revolutions & threatened uprisings. Some favorite quotes: "What does the end of a war mean if not that one side ran out of men willing to die?"....."a man handsome and vapid enough to be elected senator"....."The soldiers had spread about the room like ivy"....."In the local dialect, there were two kinds of WE: We that included YOU, and another, which did not."....."tiny streams of water drawn on the path like a system of veins". Not really a book I liked but respected.

Keenan rated it

In an unnamed country in South America, struggling to heal after a civil war that seemed endless, a radio program called Lost City Radio gathers the nation together once a day. It is hosted by Norma whose voice both eloquent and empathetic, tells the news of the day interspersed with musical interludes, but most importantly Norma reads lists of names which people send her of those who have disappeared or are lost. They hope that by reading these names on the radio they will be able to find their friends and loved ones who are missing due to the war. Occasionally someone is found through the show and there are reunions that are broadcast, giving hope to the country that their loved ones will also be found.[Norma's] public life was the radio, where she was mother to an imaginary nation of missing people. Her private life was antiseptic and empty, a place of memory, music and solitude, and it would have remained that way except that one day a young boy named Victor comes to the radio station and asks for Norma. He has brought a list of the missing from his village and hopes that she will read the names on her show. As Norma reads through the list she recognizes someone that she too has been looking for: her husband Rey.Although Alarcon has written a powerful meditation on war and its aftermath, this book is also a haunting story of loss and the power of second chances. Norma has constructed a life for herself, but still waits for her husband to return, never giving herself permission to fully live again. As Alarcon puts it: There are people out there who think of themselves as belonging to someone. To a person who for whatever reason has gone. And they wait years: they dont look for their missing, they are the missing. As Norma tries to come to terms with what it means for her husbands name to be on this list, we begin to see her wake up and to find new meaning and purpose in her life.Almost fable-like in its telling, Alarcon writes fluidly, with characters who are both engaging and fully realized. The story is told in brief flashbacks to different times and places, and with different narrators, which is a bit distracting but served as a useful device since it gave those of us who have never experienced war a small taste of its chaotic and disorienting nature. Compelling and thoughtful, this book has stayed with me long after I read it.Brendas Rating: *****(5 Stars out of 5)Recommend this book to: Keith, Ken, Sharon and Marian.Book Study Worthy: YES!Read in ebook format.

Viola rated it

So beautiful and sad. The main character, Norma, lives in the capital city of an unnamed Latin American country experiencing an uneasy peace after the end of a decade-long civil war. Norma--or rather, her voice--is a kind of national icon because of her radio show, to which listeners call and tell her about their friends and family who have disappeared in the war, in the hopes that they're alive and will hear. Norma is somewhat disillusioned with the show, but continues partly out of her own unarticulated hope that it will help her find her own missing husband.War infiltrates every detail of this book. Senseless political violence, or the threat of it, is omnipresent, and everyone is missing someone. What Alarcon does most vividly in this novel, though, is show how connections are made in the midst of the randomness, how people build their lives in that environment, and how their lives disintegrate again. Just great.