In 1991, when the conversations between the Salvadorean
government and the guerrilla seem to forebode a near peace, journalist Erasmo Aragón is about to leave Mexico and return to San
Salvador to begin a new life and partake in the foundation of a new magazine, a
project about which he is very enthusiastic. Erasmo
also sees his return to what he considers to be his native country as an escape
valve to the growingly tormentous relationship with
Eva, with whom he has a daughter. Before leaving, Erasmo
visits Doctor Chente Alvarado with the desperate hope
that he can help soothe his terrible stomach pains. He undergoes several
sessions of hypnosis with the doctor in order to liberate the stress which,
among other factors, is provoking this pain. But the well-being that he feels
at the beginning of the sessions soon becomes an obsession to remember anything
that he might have revealed to the doctor, and as to why he suddenly finds
himself reliving tragic episodes from his life.
Horacio Castellanos Moya was born in 1957 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. He was brought up in El
Salvador and has lived, since 1979, in different cities throughout America and
Europe. He worked as a journalist in Mexico City for twelve years and lived in
Frankfurt, Germany, as a guest writer of the International Frankfurt Book Fair.
He currently teaches in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and has been invited as a
guest professor at the University of Tokyo. He is the author of eight novels,
six of which have been published by Tusquets, translated into several languages
and critically acclaimed. In 2009 the English translation of his novel Insensatez (Senselessness) received the XXVIII
Northern California Book Award.