The Paris Review

The Reluctant Leader of Spain’s Literary Avant-Garde

Agustín Fernández Mallo. Author photo: Mutari, from Wikimedia Commons.

In June 2007, in Seville, Spain, a conference was held under the banner “New Fictioneers: The Spanish Literary Atlas.” Around forty writers and critics came together at the Andalusian Center for Contemporary Art to discuss the conservatism they felt to be suffocating their national literature. United in their belief that the Spanish novel in particular was in a bad state, they pointed to a disregard for the increasing centrality of digital media in people’s lives and a knee-jerk resistance to anything that smacked of formal experimentation. They were mostly of a similar age, born in the twilight of the Franco regime, committed to the DIY punk ethos of the fledgling blogosphere, and more likely to claim lineage to J. G. Ballard or Jean Baudrillard than any garlanded compatriots of their own. Nonetheless, the only true point of agreement on the day was that they were not part of a unified movement. The conference’s inaugural address itself rejected any suggestion of a coherent generation—a critical commonplace familiar in Spain ever since the clumping together, at the end of the nineteenth century, of the Generation of ’98. Within a few weeks, however, an article appeared dubbing these writers “The Nocilla Generation”: the most significant literary phenomenon of Spain’s democratic era now had a label, and it stuck.

Perhaps appropriately, the group’s designated leader, Agustín Fernández Mallo, had not been at any of these meetings, and he claimed to have no ties with those who had. His , the first book in a trilogy and one part

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Paris Review

The Paris Review22 min read
Social Promotion
I didn’t understand. If that boy couldn’t read, why was he up there? The girl they originally had hosting the ceremony didn’t show, but why they put that boy there? Just because he volunteer for everything? You can’t read off enthusiasm. It made the
The Paris Review2 min read
Dark Pattern
I accept the terms and conditions of our relationship as indicated by my continued use of this interface, designed with the indulgent architecture of a desert casino no one ever wants to leave, least of all the luckless gambler digging deeper to find
The Paris Review1 min read
Hasten Slowly And You Shall Soon Arrive
hasten slowly and you shall soon arrivepriyanka said, quoting milarepa after all this timemy patience waned its wayinto the dipping sun with the pin-tailed onewhose knowledge was encyclopedic…. betelgeuse is turning on and offlike your love—everybody

Related