Pedro Lemebel (1952-2015) is considered one of the most important queer writers of twentieth-century Latin America and was also an activist and a performance artist. Born in Santiago, Chile, he became a renowned voice of Latin American counterculture during the Pinochet dictatorship and its aftermath. He received Chile's Jose Donoso Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is best known for his cronicas and one novel, My Tender Matador, which has been translated into more than a dozen languages and was adapted in 2020 into a critically acclaimed film by Chilean director Rodrigo Sepulveda.Gwendolyn Harper won a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and a Work in Progress grant from the Robert B. Silvers Foundation for A Last Supper of Queer Apostles. She holds an MFA from Brown University.
'Lemebel doesn't have to write poetry to be the best poet of my generation... When everyone who has treated him like dirt is lost in the cesspit or in nothingness, Pedro Lemebel will still be a star' - Roberto Bolano 'He speaks brilliantly for a difference that refuses to disappear' - Garth Greenwell 'Lemebel's critique of the western colonisation of sexual identity was almost as vicious as it was of the Pinochet dictatorship' - Observer 'Pedro Lemebel's writing is a remarkable and radically uncompromising chronicle of queer life in anti-queer times. As such, its time is now. It is beautifully loyal to queer Santiago, queer Chile; to Chilean queers under the dictatorship, during the AIDS catastrophe, through the unrelenting poverty of neoliberalism. Such loyalty might exclude an anglophone reader. But Gwendolyn Harper's translation is astoundingly good. It allowed me to feel that I was being spoken to directly. And to know that Lemebel's personality, his poetry, his love, his grief, his anger, his generosity, his voice, are all still with us, and still true. Pedro Lemebel is alive! And I am in love' - Keith Ridgway, author of 'A Shock' 'This book reminds me of Jean Genet, of the late great Juan Goytisolo - of everything that I love about truly queer writing. It shares their rage, their laughter, their fierceness and their courage. A truly sensational addition to our collective heritage' - Neil Bartlett, author of Ready to Catch Him Should He Fall