The most important work of fiction by a major Latin America author.
On Heroes and Tombs is woven around a violent crime: the scion of a
prominent Argentinian family, Alejandra, shoots her father and burns
herself alive over his corpse. The story shifts between perspectives to
reveal the lives of those closest to her, telling of Martín, her
troubled lover; Bruno, a writer who loved her mother; and Fernando, her
father--who believes himself hunted by a secret, international
organization of the blind.
Exploring the tumult of Buenos Aires in the 1950s, characters are
illuminated against burning churches and corporate greed. An examination
of Argentinian history and culture, it reveals the country at every
level, leading its reader into a world of passion, philosophy, and
paranoia.