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THE DIVINE BOYS by Laura Restrepo

THE DIVINE BOYS

by Laura Restrepo ; translated by Carolina De Robertis

Pub Date: July 21st, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5420-4312-0
Publisher: Amazon Crossing

In Bogotá, Colombia, where the light-skinned, smartly dressed men of the upper class hunt the streets, a group of former schoolmates will discover how far they can fall into a depravity born of their unquestioned privilege.

The self-named Tutti Frutti quintet is led by charismatic Tarabeo and manic, handsome Muñeco, who are followed by the rich, spoiled Duque and eager-to-assist Píldora. Hobbit, or Hobbo, who lives on the edges of the group in class and privilege, is their "interpreter," narrating their history in a blur of disbelief and horror. He begins when they were schoolboys, ruthlessly ruling the hallways, and continues into their adulthood, when they indulge in every manner of excess. All the men feel familiar, and they can skirt the edges of caricature when it comes to their misogyny—for example, Hobbo has a distant relationship with his mother despite his closeness to his sister, and Muñeco has an overindulgent mother, whom we only glimpse in stifling childhood descriptions. The only semideveloped female character is Duque’s girlfriend, Alicia, whom Hobbo calls Malicia, a "playful" nickname imbued with evil—he considers her a friend though he's secretly in love with her. Hobbit is the most self-perceptive of the group by far, but he falls prey to his own brand of narcissism, paying little attention to the ever growing perversion that ultimately leads Muñeco to stalk, rape, and kill a 7-year-old girl from the mountains on the outskirts of the city. The murder of the girl, whom even Hobbit refuses to name as he dissects her body in his mind, leads to an unusual public furor by her family and manhunt for Muñeco, testing the very souls of each Tutti Frutti member.

A compelling story of how men who revel in misogyny and privilege can create a brutal darkness.