Description

Book Synopsis
A young boy plays hide and seek in the suburbs of Santiago, unaware that his neighbours are becoming entangled in the brutality of Pinochet's regime. Then one night a mysterious girl appears in his neighbourhood and makes a life-changing request.

Trade Review
Zambra is one of the writers of my generation that I most admire. Never a wasted word. Never a false note. His is an utterly unique voice, one I go back to again and again -- Daniel Alarcón, author * Lost City Radio *
I've found myself rereading, trying to work out this short novel's intricate structure of gaps and holes -- Adam Thirlwell, Books of the Year * New Statesman *
Complex yet sophisticated, the novel places Zambra at the spearhead of a new Chilean fiction. [He] weaves some of the continent's most difficult historical themes into an exciting modern art form -- Mina Holland * Observer *
A brief, elegant novel of life and writing after Pinochet... Zambra cannot simply be pigeonholed as a "Spanish-Language" writer. His concerns and influences are broader, and [his writing] has a meditative, discursive timbre... Notable -- Adam O’Riordan * Sunday Telegraph *
An achievement in pace, rhythm, and poetic restraint... With quietly disarming prose, Zambra captures the spirit of a people struggling inside themselves to tell - and, most of all, live - a better story -- Juan Vidal, 2013’s Best Translated Novels * NPR *
Brilliant -- Adam Thirlwell, Books of the Year * TLS *
Deceptively slight and finely wrought: both a wistful look at Chile's recent political history and a metafictional reflection on the nature of writing... Zambra is one of Chile's finest writers -- Matt Lewis * Times Literary Supplement *
Manages, in its sparse, moving, constantly smoking cool-eyed Chilean way, to add up to a stark and timely study of fiction, truth, memory, secrets, sex, Pinochet and death... Wonderful -- Stuart Hammond * Dazed & Confused *
A fascinating reflection on historical complicity, translated with restrained elegance by Megan McDowell -- David Evans * Financial Times *
A thrilling novel from one of Chile's outstanding young writers... Zambra's tightly crafted work explores the themes of childhood, disappointment, and the impossibility of ever returning home -- Angel Gurria-Quintana * Financial Times *
A work which is filled with the heartfelt vulnerability of testimony. I loved it and I read it with the great joy of anticipation that one has reading a writer one hopes to read more and more of in the future -- Edwidge Danticat
Thought-provoking and inspiring... a captivating book -- Abi Jackson * Manchester Evening News *
Zambra belongs to that rare species of writers that bring language back to life. The strength of this novel, its potency, is in the way it unfolds language in order to place its readers at that almost ungraspable intersection between individual and collective history -- Valeria Luiselli
Zambra mixes fiction with reality... a brief but brilliant coming of age novel -- Thomas Quinn * Big Issue *
Thought-provoking and inspiring, the book also echoes some of the author's own nostalgia of growing up during that turbulent time... Captivating * Yorkshire Post *
Zambra at his best offers an intimate recognition of his central characters, and he can evoke a setting succinctly -- Richard Gwyn * Independent *
Brilliant * Colourlines *

Ways of Going Home

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    £9.49

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    RRP £9.99 – you save £0.50 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 8 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Alejandro Zambra, Megan McDowell

    7 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Ways of Going Home by Alejandro Zambra

      Publisher: Granta Books
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 03/10/2013
      ISBN13: 9781847086273, 978-1847086273
      ISBN10: 1847086276

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A young boy plays hide and seek in the suburbs of Santiago, unaware that his neighbours are becoming entangled in the brutality of Pinochet's regime. Then one night a mysterious girl appears in his neighbourhood and makes a life-changing request.

      Trade Review
      Zambra is one of the writers of my generation that I most admire. Never a wasted word. Never a false note. His is an utterly unique voice, one I go back to again and again -- Daniel Alarcón, author * Lost City Radio *
      I've found myself rereading, trying to work out this short novel's intricate structure of gaps and holes -- Adam Thirlwell, Books of the Year * New Statesman *
      Complex yet sophisticated, the novel places Zambra at the spearhead of a new Chilean fiction. [He] weaves some of the continent's most difficult historical themes into an exciting modern art form -- Mina Holland * Observer *
      A brief, elegant novel of life and writing after Pinochet... Zambra cannot simply be pigeonholed as a "Spanish-Language" writer. His concerns and influences are broader, and [his writing] has a meditative, discursive timbre... Notable -- Adam O’Riordan * Sunday Telegraph *
      An achievement in pace, rhythm, and poetic restraint... With quietly disarming prose, Zambra captures the spirit of a people struggling inside themselves to tell - and, most of all, live - a better story -- Juan Vidal, 2013’s Best Translated Novels * NPR *
      Brilliant -- Adam Thirlwell, Books of the Year * TLS *
      Deceptively slight and finely wrought: both a wistful look at Chile's recent political history and a metafictional reflection on the nature of writing... Zambra is one of Chile's finest writers -- Matt Lewis * Times Literary Supplement *
      Manages, in its sparse, moving, constantly smoking cool-eyed Chilean way, to add up to a stark and timely study of fiction, truth, memory, secrets, sex, Pinochet and death... Wonderful -- Stuart Hammond * Dazed & Confused *
      A fascinating reflection on historical complicity, translated with restrained elegance by Megan McDowell -- David Evans * Financial Times *
      A thrilling novel from one of Chile's outstanding young writers... Zambra's tightly crafted work explores the themes of childhood, disappointment, and the impossibility of ever returning home -- Angel Gurria-Quintana * Financial Times *
      A work which is filled with the heartfelt vulnerability of testimony. I loved it and I read it with the great joy of anticipation that one has reading a writer one hopes to read more and more of in the future -- Edwidge Danticat
      Thought-provoking and inspiring... a captivating book -- Abi Jackson * Manchester Evening News *
      Zambra belongs to that rare species of writers that bring language back to life. The strength of this novel, its potency, is in the way it unfolds language in order to place its readers at that almost ungraspable intersection between individual and collective history -- Valeria Luiselli
      Zambra mixes fiction with reality... a brief but brilliant coming of age novel -- Thomas Quinn * Big Issue *
      Thought-provoking and inspiring, the book also echoes some of the author's own nostalgia of growing up during that turbulent time... Captivating * Yorkshire Post *
      Zambra at his best offers an intimate recognition of his central characters, and he can evoke a setting succinctly -- Richard Gwyn * Independent *
      Brilliant * Colourlines *

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