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The Literary Conference
The Literary Conference
Jan 16, 2026 6:36 AM

Author:César Aira,Katherine Silver

The Literary Conference

The Literary Conference showcases Cesar Aira at his finest and most irreverent.

Cesar is a translator who's fallen on very hard times due to the global economic downturn: he is also a mad scientist hell-bent on world domination. On a visit to a beach he intuitively solves an ancient riddle, finds a pirate's treasure, and becomes a very wealthy man. Even so, Cesar's bid for world domination comes first and so he hurries to attend a literary conference to be near the man whose clone he hopes will lead an army to victory: the world-renowned Mexian author Carlos Fuentes. A comic science-fiction fantasy of the first order, The Literary Conference is the perfect vehicle for Cesar Aira's takeover of twenty-first century literature.

Praise for Cesar Aira:

'Once you've started reading Aira, you don't want to stop' Roberto Bolaño

'Aira is firmly in the tradition of Jorge Luis Borges and W. G. Sebald' Los Angeles Times

Cesar Aira was born in Coronel Pringles, Argentina, in 1949, and has lived in Buenos Aires since 1967. One of the most prolific writers in Argentina, Aira has published more than seventy books.

Reviews

Charming, clever, well-written, laugh-out-loud funny with a great plot

—— Irish Times

Hilarious and full of surprises

—— Daily Telegraph

Compulsively readable

—— The Times

Another huge treat from Catherine Alliott. It's hilarious yet poignant, with wonderful characters, including all the animals! I lapped up every page

—— Sophie Kinsella

Captivating and heartwarming

—— Closer

Enchanting, romantic, and tinged with terror, this modern story subtly weaves the haunting essentials of the fairy-tale tradition into a fascinating and beautifully written homage to its source material

—— The Bulletin

Listen, if you will, whispers the ghost of Jacob Grimm to Jeremy Johnson Johnson and to the readers of this delightful, modern-day fairy tale . . . The tone of Jacob’s narration captures the flavor of the Grimms’ tales while blending humorously with Jeremy’s ordinary, befuddled, teenage life . . .
Readers who love spotting allusions will appreciate this intelligent book’s robust vocabulary, and the real scholarship behind it. (Fantasy. 11-15)

—— Kirkus USA , Kirkus USA

This is a beautifully written tale and one that will stay with me long after finishing it. I can honestly say I haven’t read anything else like it. The author has managed to take elements of fairy tales and weave them intricately into a contemporary novel. I would say it is unique and original and definitely a book I will return to again and again.

—— Vivienne , http://www.serendipityreviews.co.uk/

This month's best book. 3 reasons to read Perfect: for real characters you'll fall in love with... for a book that will keep you asking questions... to question the nature of mistakes.

—— Psychologies Magazine

Full of compassion... the heartbreaking story of how two lives are derailed by a split-second mistake.

—— Good Housekeeping

A compelling novel about the crushing restrictions that class and gender can impose, the burden of parental expectation, and the stigma attached to mental illness.

—— Independent on Sunday

[Joyce] is a charming and skilful writer

—— Guardian

The language [Joyce] uses is really poignant and evocative. It is so beautiful and well-crafted I didn't want it to end.

—— Jo Whiley, Mail on Sunday

Unforgettable... a deft and original follow-up to The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

—— Woman & Home

The author of last year's biggest selling debut The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry returns with a very different but equally captivating novel... This is a heartbreaking story, full of compassion, that unfolds gently but relentlessly against the backdrop of the suburban '70s. Perfect confirms [Rachel Joyce] as a major new voice.

—— Cathy Rentzenbrink , Bookseller Book of the Month July 2013

Moving, insightful and satirical

—— Booktime

Joyce’s last novel The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry was a wonderful story of an older man walking across England to say goodbye to a dying friend. It was spoken of fondly in book clubs and in reviews and longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. In Perfect, Joyce has created an excellent follow up.

—— Emerald Street

A cleverly-plotted tale, it is moving yet unsentimental. Sure to delight Joyce fans who made The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry a best-seller.

—— Sunday Mirror

With Perfect, Joyce wrings another rewarding tale out of the little tragedies of life

—— The Simple Things

Rachel Joyce's first novel, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, won both commercial success and wide critical acclaim (it was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize). She may just repeat the trick with Perfect, a mixture of comedy and drama in much the same vein... this is a novel with the capacity to both surprise and charm.

—— Financial Times

Out of the smallest, most delicate building blocks, Rachel Joyce gradually builds a towering sense of menace. She understands people, in all their intricacy and vulnerability, in a way few writers do. Perfect is a poignant and powerful book, rich with empathy and charged with beautiful, atmospheric writing.

—— Tana French, bestselling author of In The Woods and Broken Harbour

Intriguing and suspenseful... Joyce, showing the same talent for adroit plot development seen in the bestselling The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, brings both narrative strands together in a shocking, redemptive denouement.

—— Publishers Weekly

[Joyce's] sympathetically realised characters are people living on the edge, whether of loneliness, poverty or mental illness, and despite its underlying sadness, the book ends with the presage of hope.

—— Good Book Guide

A moving and original novel... it confirms [Joyce] as one of the most interesting voices in British fiction

—— Il Venerdi

A rewarding, multi-layered novel with empathy for disturbed mental states and, towards the end, a clever fast-forwarding 30 years.

—— The Oldie

Rachel Joyce's new novel is simply Perfect.

—— Vanity Fair

[Joyce] triumphantly returns with PERFECT…As Joyce probes the souls of Diane, Byron, and Jim, she reveals – slowly and deliberately, as if peeling back a delicate onion skin – the connection between the two stories, creating a poignant, searching tale.”

—— O: The Oprah Magazine

In alternating chapters, these two stories set 40 years apart frame Joyce’s exquisitely played novel of tragedy and mental illness and the kind of wrenching courage unique to those who suffer from the latter and yet battle to overcome it. As in her brilliant debut, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, Joyce stuns with her beautifully realized characters and the unexpected convergence of her two tales.

—— Library Journal

Perfect touches on class, mental illness, and the ways a psyche is formed or broken. It has the tenor of a horror film, and yet at the end, in some kind of contortionist trick, the narrative unfolds into an unexpected burst of redemption. Buy It.

—— New York Magazine

Joyce flings “Perfect’s” characters into chaotic situations fraught with misgivings and confusion ... Diana’s descent into terror is provocative enough to carry this story, but Joyce complements it with a contemporary one about an equally fragile man named Jim who has spent most of his life in a facility for the mentally ill. His connection to Diana will surprise many readers as Joyce spins this equally compelling subplot toward its shocking revelations and conclusion.

—— Star Tribune

Better than The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry... touching [and] eccentric.

—— Janet Maslin, New York Times

Ambitious, dark and honest

—— The Guardian

That [Perfect] is unputdownable lies in its exploration of so many multilayered emotions. There is the unbreakable bond between mother and son, ?the fear of not belonging, loneliness, grief, guilt, depression, loss, the destructive nature of mental illness and how love can offer redemption.It has been a long time since a novel made me cry, but Joyce’s prose forced those tears out in the closing chapters. It is her clever did-I-read-that-right twist at the end that really got to me and had me scrabbling back though the chapters, open-mouthed.

—— Jackie Annesley , Scotland on Sunday
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