In El arma en el hombre, Castellanos Moya tells the
vigorous story of an atypical character from the Salvadorian war, for whom violence
is not a necessity, but rather a job.
In the depths of this novel we find the cruel reality of dictatorships
and the trail of pain that remains in the war fronts.
The members of the squad nicknamed him Robocop. He measures 1’90m, weighs nearly 100 kilos,
and is one of the fiercest combatants.
He was sergeant of an assault troop, but once the war concluded and the
peace treaties were signed between the guerrillas and the government of
a Central American nation, he was demobilized.
The only possessions that he conserved for his reintegration into a
supposedly civil life were three fusils, eight fragmentation grenades, his 9
mm., and a check worth three months’ salary.
What to do? Since the weak do
not survive, Robocop will dedicate himself to the only work for which he
is trained: fighting. And so he will become a member of several
gangs of delinquents – integrated by ex-militaries or ex-guerrillas, who
operate like highly specialized commandos within the framework of a delicate
political transition. Gangs for which
loyalty is merely provisional and treason always imminent.
About El arma en el hombre
“The light rhythm that Castellanos Moya imposes upon
his prose (...) demonstrates that he is an author, owner of a craft, who knows
where he wants to take the reader.”
Crónica Dominical, Mexico
“It is undoubtedly a good decision that the author
allows his hero to tell his own story, and the personal tale of the sergeant
constitutes one of the incentives of the story which benefits from the
immediacy and the emotional force of the first person (…).”
Javier Aparicio, El Pais
“A vibrating story which can be read as the allegory
of how the monster of violence devours her children.”
Leer
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.