
Episode 291 with Ruben Reyes, Jr., Author of Archive of Unknown Universes, and Master Craftsman of the Sad and Ecstatic, the Historical and the Immediate
Notes and Links to Ruben Reyes, Jr.’s Work
Ruben Reyes Jr. is the son of two Salvadoran immigrants. He completed his MFA in fiction at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.
He is a graduate of Harvard College where he studied History and Literature and Latinx Studies. His writing has appeared in The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, AGNI, BOMB Magazine, Lightspeed Magazine, LitHub, and other publications.
His debut story collection, There is a Rio Grande in Heaven, was a finalist for The Story Prize, and longlisted for the the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the Carnegie Medal for Excellence, the Aspen Words Literary Prize, and the New American Voices Award. Archive of Unknown Universes is his first novel. Originally from Southern California, he lives in Queens.
Buy Archive of Unknown Universes
Book Review for Archive of Unknown Universes from Washington Post, by Bilal Qureshi
At about 1:45, Ruben describes the experience of having his first novel out in the world
At about 3:30, Ruben talks about feedback he’s received about the novel
At about 4:35, Ruben shares publishing information and shouts out “local indies” and Bookshop.org as good places to buy the book, and he shares a story about his book tour for his story collection
At about 6:10, Ruben talks about his writing timeline and how he wrote his novel and his story collection at around the same time, allowing him flexibility and variety
At about 9:00, Ruben responds to Pete’s questions about how feedback and the writing community worked during the pandemic
At about 11:00, Ruben reflects on seeds for his novel, particularly the “turning point” that was his 2018 research trip to El Salvador
At about 12:30, Ruben talks about the importance of oral histories he did on this 2018 research trip
At about 13:25, Pete asks Ruben about the book’s dedication and how he viewed the specific and universal
At about 16:15, Pete shares the book’s profound epigraphs, and shares the book’s exposition; Ruben responds to Pete’s questions about the book’s structure and his rationale in starting the book with a letter
At about 19:25, Ruben reflects on writers and their views on a “perfect novel”
At about 20:45, Ruben and Pete describe the book’s pivotal machine, The Defractor, and fun with different “Interlocutors” for the machine
At about 23:40, Pete provides background information on Ana and Luis, important characters in the books
At about 25:20, Ruben and Pete discuss the importance of Archbishop Oscar Romero and his coverage in the novel
At about 28:00, Ruben reflects on how the “What if?” question is so resonant in literature and outside
At about 28:50, Ruben and Pete talk about setting the tone for the start of the relationship between Rafael and Neto and an early scene at Havana’s Malecon
At about 30:40, Pete reflects on traumas so understatedly and profoundly rendered
At about 32:00, Ruben talks about Ana’s and Luis’ relationship
At about 33:40, Pete wonders about an important decision made by Neto, and Ruben expands on research he did that showed how youth was largely in control during the Salvadoran Civil War
At about 35:50, Ruben expands on what demands and hopes the revolutionaries/guerrillas had in the Salvadoran Civil War
At about 39:05, The two discuss the book’s parallel storyline
At about 41:55, Ruben and Pete reflect on the fiery passions of youth and what makes relationships works and connections
At about 44:15, The two discuss similarities and differences between Neto and Rafael
At about 46:10, Ruben homes in on how queerness was seen/embraced in the 70s, as shown through Rafael and Neto
At about 47:30, Pete highlights a profound quote as he and Ruben talk about “grasping the lost threads of history” and how Ruben’s book connects to ideas of silences and traumas and "reclaiming history”
At about 49:40, Ruben shouts out Leisy Abrego’s “On Silences” and its argument about silences as “intergenerational” in the Salvadoran diaspora
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Please tune in for Episode 292 with Joan Silber, a novelist and short story writer. She won the 2017 National Book Critics Circle Award in Fiction and the 2018 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for her novel Improvement. Her latest novel, Mercy, is her 10th book of fiction.
This episode drops today, September 2, Pub Day for Mercy.
Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.
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