Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Due mille sei cento sessanta sei
Due mille sei cento sessanta sei | Roberto Bolao
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
mjtwo
2666 | Roberto Bolao
post image
Pickpick

26 July-14 Aug 24 (audiobook)
Inspired to read by its position as No 6 on NYT best 100 of 21st century. It seemed to take much longer than 19 days!
Maybe because I re-listened to numerous sections when I realised I had drifted off and was confused as to how they fit. Sometimes the answer was they didn‘t really.
Many of the stories were fascinating but incomplete. Perhaps that was always Bolano‘s intention. A lot is left unanswered.

blurb
Liz_M
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Weekly Report

I've finished 2666. What an experience.

I'm nearly done with Zama and waiting to see which books BookSpinBingo will tell me to prioritize.

BarbaraBB Well done! I was super impressed after finishing it 8mo
31 likes1 comment
quote
Liz_M
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

The first time that Jean-Claude Pelletier read Benno von Archimboldi was Christmas 1980, in Paris, when he was nineteen years old and studying German literature.

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

sarahbarnes I loved this book. 10mo
BarbaraBB Me too, of course @sarahbarnes 😀. Enjoy, Liz, although that‘s not the right word 10mo
sarahbarnes Of course @BarbaraBB 😃! 10mo
Liz_M @BarbaraBB @sarahbarnes I have been putting off because I don't want to be reading the dreaded section 4 while on vacation. Jan/Feb during the depressing winter months must be the right time, yes? 😂 10mo
BarbaraBB I think section 4 is the best, I still often think of it. The depressing winter months might add to the experience 😱 10mo
31 likes5 comments
review
Taylor
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Pickpick

Unsettling book. And while I‘m not as sold on it as a lot of people are, I appreciate it for its imagery, imagination, and the payoffs he‘s able to give for most of the stories contained within (there are multitudes). He can start a new story, and in the last two sentences hammer it home so he makes it worth it. But I can‘t help but think of the now commonplace understanding/critique that dead women are used as plot devices in entertainment.

BarbaraBB Excellent review! 4y
Taylor @BarbaraBB Thank you! Appreciate it. 4y
11 likes2 comments
quote
Taylor
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer

“This country,” he said to Reiter, “has tried to topple any number of countries into the abyss in the name of purity and will. As far as I‘m concerned, purity and will are utter tripe. Thanks to purity and will we‘ve all, every one of us, become cowards and thugs, which in the end are one and the same. Now we sob and moan and say we didn‘t know! we had no idea! it was the Nazis! we never would have done such a thing! We know how to whimper.”

blurb
Taylor
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer

*mutters to themselves while working their way through the Knausgaard series and “2666”*

Short books...I remember those...

review
sprainedbrain
2666 | Roberto Bolao
post image
Pickpick

I finished this beast on audio a couple of days ago. It‘s a lot!

This was my #Chile book for #ReadAroundTheWorld and another book completed for #1001Books. Oh, and my 8th finished book for #bookspinbonanza. 😃

Full review is on my blog: http://sprainedbrain.blog/2020/05/30/1001books-review-2666-by-roberto-bolano/

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

AshleyHoss820 Nice!!! Now is as good a time as any for these chunksters! I‘ve been eyeballing this as it sits on my shelf... 4y
hilded Oh wow, that‘s a big one for sure! Glad you enjoyed it 🤩 4y
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! Awesome Bonanza progress!!! 4y
70 likes2 stack adds3 comments
blurb
Taylor
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer

Easing into this one. Still at the beginning, but really liking it so far. It‘s one of those books I‘ve kind of always wanted to read. Also, I read a whole bunch of Bolaño leading up to this, because I didn‘t want to jump right to his grand opus without knowing what he‘s about.

7 likes1 stack add
blurb
gradcat
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#BookHunt #Round 2

Multiple character POVs, multiple plots, multiple settings, multiple time periods, huge cast of characters, stories within stories...you name it, and I promise you, this book has it. ♥️

(I‘m always behind on everything. I don‘t want to tag anyone so late after this was posted—sorry!

blurb
GatheringBooks
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#BiblioMAYnia Day 4: #SameBookDifferentColor although the hues and shades are purty similar. Still have not read this behemoth of a novel though, and I have two copies! 😭🤣😂

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Great covers!!! 5y
vivastory This is a very difficult book as far as subject matter. I'd never reread it, but I thought it was great 5y
vivastory Personally I don't think it's his best. I like Savage Detectives more, but it's definitely worthwhile 5y
See All 7 Comments
OriginalCyn620 📚👍🏻📚 5y
zezeki @vivastory I agree, it's a great book, but I also can't imagine rereading it. And I as well prefer Savage Detectives, that I really really loved. 😄 5y
vivastory @zezeki I think I'm overdue for a Savage Detectives reread. It's been far too long! 5y
zezeki @vivastory It's been a while since I've read it, too. 5y
48 likes7 comments
blurb
castanheira
2666 | Roberto Bolao
post image

Hmm what to say about this? 🤷‍♀️ well we can see the extraordinary writing of the author. However, after a while, the kills (in my point of view) become boring. I notice that I was reading not for pleasure but just to end it. On the finals chapters the author regains our attention but never in the same way. Maybe Roberto was right and this should have been divide in 3 🤔🤔

5 likes1 stack add
review
mrjung
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Pickpick

Excellent, complex, not for the faint-hearted. A meditation on art, ethics, and femicide.

Catsandbooks Welcome to Litsy! 🎉💕 @LitsyWelcomeWagon 5y
LitsyWelcomeWagon Welcome to Litsy! Here are links to #Litsytips: http://bit.ly/litsytips and #LitsyHowTo videos: goo.gl/UrCpoU. There‘s lots of fun things to do: book exchanges, buddy reads, photo challenges and more! @litsywelcomewagon 5y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 🎃📖📚 5y
CoffeeNBooks Welcome to Litsy! 📚 5y
Readswithcoffee Welcome to Litsy ☕️📚📚📚☕️ 5y
6 likes5 comments
blurb
Emu
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#day1 #7days7covers Post a cover you love each day for 7 days. No explanation needed. Thank you @IvoryLunatic

review
wanderer15
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Pickpick

Stunning. As other reviewers of this book have noted, 2666 tests readers‘ endurance to the outermost limits, both in terms of subject matter (part 4‘s relentless, harrowing violence in particular) and in length (900 pages of rich, complex prose). But I found the end result to be masterful, and well worth the effort.

BarbaraBB Yeah, a rewarding read, I thought so too. 6y
Mcoun It was a difficult read on many levels. 6y
20 likes2 comments
blurb
nudibranch
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Guys. What started as a hilarious commentary on academic culture has since spiraled into one of the bleakest books I have ever read. What this book is ABOUT is the unsolved mystery of a mass femicide happening in a region of Mexico. I'm a third of the way through the book, slogging through part 3 at the moment. And it's an important book, I won't deny it; but it is SO hard to read. I don't know how much more I can stomach.

Nebklvr Did you make it through? 5y
65 likes1 comment
review
AMVP
post image
Pickpick

I imagine it's hard to look back on the experience of reading any ~900 page book with real objectivity. I know there were times, certainly during my long breaks from it, that I'd have felt inclined to judge it merely okay. Now, at the end, I feel the weight of a full life behind my memories of it, an accomplishment that only great novels can claim.

vivastory I loved it & definitely thought it was one of Bolanos two masterpieces, but I don't think I'd ever reread it, although I will definitely reread his second masterpiece 6y
AMVP @vivastory I've got that one too. Look forward to reading it. 6y
15 likes2 comments
blurb
AMVP
post image

2 volumes down, one to go.

This last one seems to be the shortest, and if I stick to ~50 pages a day, I should be able to complete it by year's end.

blurb
AMVP
post image

Book 1 of 3 is complete.

Given the font size, it feels like this book should easily be two times bigger. Will undoubtedly wind up being the longest thing I read in 2018.

Reviewsbylola What a great cover! Small font size raises my blood pressure. 😂 6y
17 likes1 comment
quote
AMVP
post image

Your word of the day, everyone.

review
Jamesfahyauthor
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Pickpick

This book is an absolute masterwork in my opinion. Gritty, harrowing, oddly dreamlike and building suspense and foreboding brick by menacing brick until the whole wall comes crashing down on you like a midnight storm.

Annl Great review! 6y
Cathythoughts Excellent review 👍🏻💫 6y
18 likes2 stack adds2 comments
blurb
AMVP
post image

#augustisatrip #day10 - #mexico

Feels like I trot this title out a lot for these theme challenges, and I regret doing so in light of my continued failure to actually read it. Still one of my favorite editions of any book I own.

16 likes1 stack add
blurb
GatheringBooks
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#ReadingResolutions Day 28: The #ThursdayThriller I hope to read for our upcoming July-September reading theme on crime, murder, mystery at GatheringBooks. Good intentions count for something, right? Right? #MockFaint.

review
Mcoun
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
Mehso-so

This was a long, very tough read, centered around the disappearances and deaths of several hundred women in St. Teresa, a fictional town in Mexico near the U.S. border in the 90s. It was incredibly gruesome, particularly part 4, and I didn‘t think the gore added to the story. I found part 5 to be the most interesting in the way it tied all the previous parts together.

review
wesmandingo83
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
Pickpick

I read this.

blurb
Yossarian
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/theater/bolano-2666-stage-version-free-str...

“This five and a half hour stage adaptation . . .”

I think this legitimately deserves an “OMFG!”

Zelma Wow. 😱👏 7y
Suet624 Jeepers! 7y
59 likes2 comments
blurb
mklong
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Any Roberto Bolano fans out there? The stage adaptation of “2666” is now streaming for free! https://nyti.ms/2KcAELz

This adaptation sounds as ambitious as the book, and I suppose it would have to be. The foundation that funded the production and the streaming was started with lottery winnings. They produced it knowing it would never be profitable, just for the sake of art.

vivastory I'm currently reading this one. About 2/3 of the way through. Will definitely be checking this out. Thanks for posting! 7y
TheKidUpstairs Interesting. I can't imagine how an adaptation of this one would work, but I'm intrigued! 7y
47 likes2 comments
review
tricours
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Mehso-so

What on earth was this? I can‘t say I‘m as blown away by this as everyone else seems to be. The writing was deadly monotonous at times and the ridiculous amount of detail was just... ridiculous! And what was the point of it all? For once I am going to complain about the ending not being, well, an ending. This book should come with a disclaimer for that.

BarbaraBB I really liked (although that isn‘t the right word) the part about the murders. I‘ve been Googling like crazy afterwards. The other parts were rather frustrating, I think, I often had no clue what they added to the whole. 7y
tricours @BarbaraBB The murder part was the only one that really captured my attention, the first part about the search for the author was just really weird. The author seems a bit obsessed by sex and rape though. 7y
BarbaraBB ‘A bit‘ 😂 7y
zezeki If I remember correctly, Bolano died before finishing this, so he maybe didn't get to write the part that would round the whole story up. 7y
32 likes1 stack add4 comments
blurb
Sunita_p
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Finally taken off the shelf to read.

loukitkhemka Damn hard and long novel to read. But, it was worth the effort though. 7y
2 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
TheKidUpstairs
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

1. Reagan
2. Thanksgiving (🇨🇦)
3. Friday
4. 2013
5. 99 Problems
6. 2666 by Roberto Bolano
7. 16
8. 5
9. Just one!
10. 15, I think

This was fun! Thanks @Kaye and congrats on your #50k milestone!

blurb
Godmotherx5
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

My weekend plans changed allowing me to read more than I expected. The best part was my timer. This was the first time my clumsy self did not accidentally reset the clock. #24in48 @24in48

robinb Great job! 👏👏👏 7y
WhatDeeReads Oh yeah! More reading time. 7y
Bookzombie 🎉🎉🎉👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 7y
See All 12 Comments
JacqMac 👏🎉 7y
Graciouswarriorprincess 👍🏻😀🎉🎊 7y
RohitSawant 👏👏👏 7y
Eggs 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 7y
SincerelyWinona I‘ve definitely accidentally reset every 24in48 I‘ve done. Good work!!! 👍🏻 7y
mrp27 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 That was my biggest fear during the readathon! I got into the habit of taking a screen shot of my time every time I stopped so if I hit reset I at least had a total. 7y
Librarybelle Great job! 7y
Godmotherx5 Thank you for Litsy support. I took screenshots as insurance. So happy not to have needed them. @robinb @WhatDeeReads @Bookzombie @JacqMac @Graciouswarriorprincess @rohit-sawant @Eggs @SincerelyWinona @mrp27 @Librarybelle 7y
drokka 🙌 7y
99 likes1 stack add12 comments
blurb
Godmotherx5
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

I‘m slogging through this behemoth during #24in48. Thanks to the Readathon, my insomnia is actually productive.

#Insomnia @24in48

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 👏🏻👏🏻 7y
58 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
Fang88
post image
Pickpick

Great book - Great cover! I love his storytelling and will for sure reread these in the future.

Cortg Great covers indeed! ❤️ 7y
CoffeeCatsBooks I‘d never seen the 3 volume set. Striking! The Hc is still on my TBR stack. 7y
batsy Wow 😍 7y
Soubhiville Pretty! 7y
97 likes2 stack adds4 comments
quote
Pat1287
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Only in chaos are we conceivable. #robertobolano #2666

blurb
TheKidUpstairs
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
DocBrown Good luck! I‘ve tried several times to read this but can‘t seem to get enough momentum. 7y
TheKidUpstairs @mdhughes72 LOL! yes, it's a slog at times! I read this years ago, before kids, when I had the fortitude and willpower to make it through. 7y
64 likes2 comments
blurb
Pat1287
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

...starting a new trip today ❤️ #robertobolano #2666

5 likes1 stack add
blurb
Kristelh
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#30daysofreadathon #thick and #thin. Forgot to post yesterday

Liz_M Nice mix of #1001books! 7y
16 likes1 comment
blurb
GatheringBooks
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

#Septembowie Day 23: I anticipate that #TimeWillCrawl as I read this tome of a novel - not sure exactly when I will start reading this one. Hopefully in this lifetime. But what can I say? I love big books and I can not lie.

Marchpane It's a behemoth, that's for sure! 7y
tournevis I read th first third. But the book is so big I had to stop, I could not hold it. And there is no ebook version in French, so I don't know when I'll finish it. 7y
Cinfhen I've never heard of this book before...sounds amazing 😉 7y
23 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
SubwayBookReview
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Adrian: "This is the most complex novel by Bolaño. The story is about a man looking for a writer who has disappeared. He travels through Mexico and arrives in a fictional city named Santa Teresa. That city is based on Juarez where women did disappear. The terror in Bolaño's work is the kind you can't see but it exists all over the world. In the news, they show you all the horrible things. Bolaño scares you without ever showing you the monster."

sofiaga I love to see #LatinAmerican literature on Litsy 7y
60 likes8 stack adds1 comment
review
BarbaraBB
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
Pickpick

2666 exists of 5 novels that are hardly connected. The central part is about the ongoing murdering of women in a Mexican bordertown where many come looking for work in the 'cheap labour' American manufacturing factories. This story is based on the true situation in Ciudad Juarez. The impunity is shocking, as is the halfhearted way the police investigates the murders, which Bolano describes in every gruesome detail. #1001books Picture: Austria

blurb
Liberty
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Day 6 of the #RiotGrams challenge: number titles! Here are a few of my favorites. ❤️📚🤘🏻

SpecsyBeast I loved Captain Bluebear! 7y
125 likes1 comment
blurb
Kristelh
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image
9 likes3 stack adds
blurb
Janedoughnut
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

I felt relief after the end of part four, creating distance between myself and all of these dead women. Then I met the 500 Jews and the Germans tasked with "disposing" of them.

Mcoun I felt the same. (edited) 6y
1 like1 comment
blurb
Janedoughnut
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

blurb
bitterbear
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

So these have been sitting on my shelf forever (Roberto bolano) anyone want to do a #buddyread with me? I've read the skating rink and the Third Reich..

blurb
TheKidUpstairs
2666: A Novel | Roberto Bolao, Natasha Wimmer
post image

Sad to say, I don't have any #mexicanormexicanamericanauthors on my shelves, but I am enjoying building my TBR from everyone else's posts!

The closest I've got is Bolano, who was Chilean but spent much of his youth in Mexico, which was the setting for most of 2666. A challenging, at times compelling (slow at others), but ultimately satisfying read.

#maybookflowers
@RealLifeReading