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The Big Book Project
The Big Book Project is a multi-venue reading experience for bibliophiles fascinated by long or dense works of fiction and interested in discussing them with others, one novel at a time.
The works selected will be capacious novels from the mid-nineteenth century through today that possess an abundant writing style or complexity in structure and themes.
The notion that reading need not be a solitary activity has special resonance with these novels given that there is much to discuss, elaborate upon and question in the authors’ expression of ideas. I like to think of these novels as abundant because I appreciate their richness and volume, characteristics bestow a sort of grace to luxuriate with the text.
The critic and scholar Alexander Nehamas writes that when a work of art beckons, it is because we do not fully understand it but feel the strong desire to do so. And it is this deliberative process, the journey, of trying to understand why a novel is extraordinary that I want to explore with fellow readers at The Big Book Project.
We discuss books like Roberto Bolaño’s 2666
The Big Book Project
Unmasking the Banality of Evil: The Harrowing Crimes in Roberto Bolaño’s 2666
In this gripping episode of The Big Book Project, host Lori Feathers dives into the most haunting and unrelenting section of Roberto Bolaño’s 2666—The Part About the Crimes. This chapter confronts readers with a relentless account of femicides in the border town of Santa Teresa.
Lori explores why Bolaño meticulously details the murders of more than 200 women—examining how individualizing victims creates an emotional impact, the novel’s critique of societal apathy, and the shocking contrast between law enforcement’s response to these crimes versus their pursuit of a church vandal known as "the Penitent."
Join us as we unravel the themes of violence, dehumanization, and the chilling banality of evil, drawing connections to philosopher Hannah Arendt’s work. How does Bolaño want us to react? What emotions does this overwhelming accumulation of horror evoke? And what does it say about the societies we live in today?
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