Thursday, June 11, 2015

#42 Loteria- Kevin Gonzalez


#42 Loteria- Kevin Gonzalez

Hector is dealing with his father’s recent suicide and relocating his mother into the apartment of his father’s former mistress. As he tries to reconcile his fathers life and death, he contemplates his own.

There is little in this story that I enjoyed.  None of the characters are likeable…the father is a corrupt politician, a philandering, lottery-winning, money wasting coward who ran over his son’s dog. His son has schemed behind his back to become the executor of the will. His mother, pissed-off by his father’s mistress takes it out on the wrong woman. Hector himself is a cold, bitter loser that plays false victim to both his father and son. But neither are they despicable either.  There is just little in each to care enough about.

All three generations are named Hector, and I think we are supposed to see them as 3 aspects of the narrator.   The 4th Hector is the giant cockroach in his apartment that he continually tries to kill, but can’t.  That is he can’t kill himself off like his father did.

His mother’s name is Socorro which means “help, I’m drowning.”

I just don’t get this story.  I thought at first that we were supposed to hate the father for mis-spending his lottery winnings, but it turns out he left than an ample amount in his will. Nobody seems particularly hurt, or needing, or anything that makes me want to hear a story regarding any of these characters.

Gonzalez tried to write in some cute allusions and metaphors that really didn’t work for me.  For example, among his fathers many suicide notes, he uses comas but never periods. Later he looks up at the night sky and notices: “In the sky the stars appeared like all the periods that suicide notes have forgotten.”  That just seemed forced to me.

Notable Passage: none



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