
The Dream of My Return
Drinking way too much and breaking up with his wife, an exiled journalist in Mexico City dreams of returning home to El Salvador. But is it really a dream or a nightmare? When he decides to treat his liver pain with hypnosis, his few impulse-control mechanisms rapidly dissolve. Hair-brained schemes, half-mad arguments, unraveling murder plots, hysterical rants: everything escalates at a maniacal pace, especially the crazy humor.
Reviews

Donald@riversofeurope
If you've read a Moya novel before, you know what you're getting into here. This is very similar to Senselessness in many ways. It's not quite as good, but it's still pretty darn good. Bolaño fans will be happy to see the appearance of an infrarealist poet.

Clare B@hadaly