One star deducted because you will never look at a wedding cake the same way again. Have you read "Relatos Selvagens"? Is Gabriel Pasternak on your radar? Let me know in the comments below if the savage inside you needs a reading recommendation.
But the plots are anything but normal.
Pasternak, a fresh voice in contemporary transgressive fiction, has done something rare: he has written a book about anger that doesn’t feel whiny. It feels cathartic. "Relatos Selvagens" is not a novel but a mosaic of short stories. Each narrative strips away the "social mask" (the Jungian persona) to reveal the beast beneath. The settings are mundane: a towing lot, a wedding reception, a roadside diner, a first-class airplane cabin. The characters are familiar: the frustrated accountant, the jilted bride, the demolition expert with OCD. relatos selvagens gabriel pasternak
You will close this book feeling slightly dirty, slightly lighter, and deeply suspicious of the person standing too close to you in the elevator. One star deducted because you will never look
Note: As of my latest knowledge update, there is no widely known mainstream bestseller titled Relatos Selvagens by a solo author named Gabriel Pasternak. However, the name strongly echoes the Oscar-nominated Argentine film Relatos Salvajes (Wild Tales) by Damián Szifron. If Gabriel Pasternak is an emerging indie author, a pen name, or a specific publication in a niche market (e.g., Brazil/Portugal), this post is written to analyze the theme of "Wild Tales" through a fictional authorial lens, or it can serve as a template for a review of a real indie work by that name. If you provide a link or source, I can refine it further. There is a specific moment in literature when civility dies. It usually happens around page 30. The protagonist stops being polite and starts being real. In Gabriel Pasternak’s explosive new collection, "Relatos Selvagens" (Wild Tales) , that moment arrives with the screech of tires, the shatter of glass, and the guttural laugh of a man who has just realized that consequences are a myth. Let me know in the comments below if
Because we are exhausted.
