Foreword Reviews

77

Guillermo Saccomanno, Andrea Labinger (Translator)

- MONICA CARTER

Open Letter (FEBRUARY) Softcover $14.95 (220pp) 978-1-940953-89-2

“How can you narrate terror?” This question is a central focus of Guillermo Saccomanno’s 77, set during the 1977 reign of terror in Argentina, the Dirty War. The military coup d’état of 1976 led to the killing of over thirty thousand Argentinia­ns suspected of left-wing propaganda. Saccomanno was in his twenties when he lived through this; here, he returns to that time through his narrator and protagonis­t, Professor Gómez.

77 is a taut historical thriller with noir overtones. The novel opens with a prologue introducin­g Gómez, a gay man now in his eighties, who recalls his life in 1977, when he was a literature professor in his fifties. He posits the question of narrating terror in the prologue as a jaded man who recognizes his own cowardice and complacenc­y during that time, but who showed humanity no matter the consequenc­es.

Gómez is also always on the prowl for sex, anonymous or not, which leads him into dangerous situations. Most alarming is his relationsh­ip with a homophobic, married cop who is connected to the militant government. Even his favorite student, Esteban, who is convicted of leftist propaganda, draws Gómez’s attention because of his looks.

In flashbacks, Gómez shifts between his twenties and his fifties, with parallels in each story line. Saccomanno infuses the story with an increasing sense of fear and paranoia, especially through Gómez’s relationsh­ips with dissidents. As his characters grapple with love, allegiance, and daily life under a dictatorsh­ip, every action is a form of resistance.

Gómez’s late-night wanderings through the streets of Buenos Aires of the seventies energize the novel along with Saccomanno’s judicious use myth and superstiti­on. These noirish elements deepen the suspense with a foreboding moodiness that enhances the paranoiac tone. Saccomanno’s 77 is a trenchant thriller recounting the murderous epoch of the Dirty War.

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