Mexicanos
al grito de guerra
El acero
aprestad y el bridón
Y retiemble en sus centros la tierra
Al sonoro
rugir del cañón
Mexicans
in war cry
prepare
your blade and bridle
and may the earth’s core tremble
at the
cannons’ resonant rumble
Francisco
González Bocanegra and Jaime Nunó
Mexican
National Anthem
After his novel Amor
Propio (Self-Esteem), we published Gonzalo
Celorio’s… Y retiemble en sus centros la tierra (And May the Earth Tremble
to the Core)… a novel in which two of the author’s recurrent
themes - art and life- converge.
Juan Manuel Barrientos, head of the Literature Department, is approaching
the historical centre of Mexico City. Partying the previous night has caused
him a terrible hangover, but he has already made arrangements to meet his
seminar students in the famous Salón La
Luz to visit the city’s most emblematic colonial buildings. He waits and
waits, but they never show up. When he finally realises that his students will
not make it to the appointment, he decides to scour the landmarks of the
artistic landscape on his own, as if he were worshipping the Stations of the
Cross. Resigned to the spectres that torment and follow him, he stops in
several bars, discovering not only the city’s architecture, but also a desolate
internal landscape inhabited by his father, his stepbrother Angel, and Alejandra, his sole, ill-fated passion. Increasingly drunk —and
lucid— he begins to understand that this descent into hell will inexorably lead
him to meet his tragic fate in front of the metropolitan cathedral.
Gonzalo Celorio (Mexico,
1948) studied Spanish language and literature at the Faculty of Philosophy and
Arts of the Autonomous National University of Mexico, where he is professor of
Latin American Literature since 1974. He has also taught at the Iberoamericana
University and in Mexico School. He is a member of the National System of Art
Creators and is a number member of the Mexican Academy, which is follower of
the Spanish one. Celorio has published ten books. Besides novels, his writings
include essays, literature and architecture. His work has been translated to
English, French, Italian and Portuguese. Gonzalo Celorio has obtained Prizes
such as Two Oceans Prize in Biarritz, France (1997), or IMPAC-Conarte-ITESM
Prize (1999).