The Garden Next Door
by Jose Donoso Translated from Spanish by Hardie St. Martin“The garden next door to reality is art, and . . . there is no denying Donoso’s central point; it takes imagination to live as well as to write.” –John Updike
“The garden next door to reality is art, and . . . there is no denying Donoso’s central point; it takes imagination to live as well as to write.” –John Updike
A Chilean writer named Julio and his wife, Gloria, are beset by worries, constantly bickering about money, their writing, and their son (who may or may not be plying the oldest trade in
“A wicked sendup of both magical realism and pulp fiction.” –Los Angeles Times
“This novel, rather like the dreamy garden of the title, is an illusion, a metafiction, a meditation on the nature of literature itself. It is among Donoso’s best novels, which is saying a great deal about a book by the author of The Obscene Bird of Night and A House in the Country.” –Alan Ryan, USA Today
“A stunning narrative tour de force.” –Library Journal
“Poignantly and profoundly rendered.” –The Washington Post Book World
“Luminous, erotic . . . brutally honest.” –The New York Times Book Review
“The garden next door to reality is art, and . . . there is no denying Donoso’s central point; it takes imagination to live as well as to write.” –John Updike
READING GROUP QUESTIONS
The Garden Next Door: Jos’ Donoso
What relationship do the epitaphs have to each other? How do the epitaphs reflect the title of the novel? What is Julio trying to find? From what nightmare is he trying to awake?
Hopscotch by Julio Cort”zar; The Mirror in the Text by Lucien D’llenbach; Curfew by Jos’ Donoso; The Latin American “Boom”: A Personal History by Jos’ Donoso; Taratuta/ Still Life with Pipe by Jos’ Donoso; Middlemarch by George Eliot; The French Lieutennant’s Woman by John Fowles; La nueva novela hispanoamericana by Carlos Fuentes; El mar que nos trajo by Griselda Gambaro; Narcissistic Narrative: The Metafictional Paradox by Linda Hutcheon; The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector and Giovanni Pontiero