To find an example parallel to Las cartas del Boom, and exaggerating only a bit (there are more languages involved), one would have to imagine Joyce, Proust, Kafka, and Faulkner engaging in an intense correspondence in the decade of the 1920s concerning literature and politics, including the sometimes instantaneous reactions to the works of each one.The vagaries of preservation affected what could be included. Cortázar wrote countless letters but preserved few of the many that he must have received, García Márquez periodically destroyed letters (as well as his own working notes and manuscripts), and only Fuentes kept copies of most of his outgoing correspondence. The letters begin, haltingly, in the late 1950s and dwindle to a trickle in the 1970s, in part because two of the writers (García Márquez and Vargas Llosa) were by then no longer on speaking terms, but also no doubt because greater reliance on the telephone had made written correspondence less essential. Many of the letters from Cortázar to Fuentes printed here were not included in the monumental five-volume edition of the former's letters because of restrictions from the Fuentes estate that have now been lifted.
Las cartas del Boom has been translated into several languages but not, thus far, into English. The good news on that front involves a related event: Archipelago Books — which seems to be able to undertake translation projects that few other publishers are interested in handling — will be releasing the first installment of a generous two-volume selection of Cortázar's correspondence, Letters from Julio, in September 2026. The translators are Anne McLean and Sarah Moses.
The University of Oregon hosts a blog with more information on the Boom correspondence.
On a related note, New Directions — another indispensable publisher — has published a revised translation of José Donoso's The Obscene Bird of Night, incorporating portions of the novel that were excised from the original US version. The New York Review of Books has a review. While he is not included in Las cartas del Boom (his correspondence with Fuentes has been published separately) Donoso was another key figure in the movement and The Obscene Bird of Night is regarded as his major work. I've had a copy of the old Knopf edition on my shelves for close to fifty years; one of these days I will have to getting around to reading it.


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