A generational portrait of Latin America in its post-revolutionary come-down, through the eyes of a recovering heroin addict and artist.
These are the children of revolutions, and this is their story. This is the Caribbean. This is ArgenisLuna: an artist who no longer paints, a heroin addict who no longer uses, and
an overgrown child trying to make sense of his inheritance in a country where
his once-revolutionary father is now part of the ruling elite. Thrown out of
rehab in Havana, with Goya’s tyrannical god Saturn on his mind, Argenis picks
his way through the detritus of an abandoned generation: the drag queens,
artists, hustlers and lovers trying to build lives amidst the wreckage.
Mesmerising and visionary, Made in Saturn
is a hangover from a riotous funeral, a rapid-fire elegy for the
revolutionary spirit, and a glimpse of hope for all who feel eclipsed by those who came before them. 'A book that is, in a strict sense, good. Very good. Modernist...as well as classic. A Duchamoian Goya, we might say.' El Pais