Written in 1950 (just before the fall of Perón's government), Final
Exam is Julio Cortázar's bitter and melancholy allegorical farewell to
an Argentina from which he would soon be permanently self-exiled.
In a surreal Buenos Aires, a strange fog has enveloped the city to
everyone's bewilderment. Juan and Clara, two students at a college
called The House, meet up with their friends, and, instead of preparing
for their final exam, wander the city, encountering strange happenings
and pondering life in cafés. All the while, they are trailed by the
mysterious Abel.
With its daring typography, shifts in rhythm, as well as wildly veering
directions of thought and speech, Final Exam breaks new ground in the
territory of stream-of-consciousness writing. Darkly funny--and riddled
with unresolved ambiguities--Final Exam is one of Cortázar's best
works.
Author of Hopscotch and Blow-Up, Julio Cortázar's (1914-1984) was a
novelist, poet, essayist, and short-story writer. He was born in
Brussels, lived in Argentina, but moved permanently to France in 1951,
where he became one of the twentieth century's major experimental
writers.