The Death of Artemio Cruz
Pages
307
Year
1962
Difficulty
Moderate
Themes
Mexican Revolution, power and corruption, memory, national identity
A dying man looks back on his life: from idealistic revolutionary soldier to ruthless power broker. Through the story of one corrupted soul, Fuentes tells the story of modern Mexico itself.
Why Start Here
The Death of Artemio Cruz is Fuentes’s masterpiece and the novel that established his international reputation. It is the book that best represents everything he cared about as a writer: the betrayal of the Mexican Revolution, the way power warps individuals, and the relationship between personal memory and national history.
The novel is formally inventive without being difficult to follow. It alternates between first, second, and third person narration, each perspective illuminating a different layer of Cruz’s consciousness. This technique sounds experimental on paper, but on the page it feels natural, like the way memory actually works when you are trying to understand your own life.
For readers new to Fuentes, this is the ideal entry point. It is his most widely read and discussed novel, and it connects naturally to the broader tradition of Latin American fiction.
What to Expect
A novel in fragments: twelve key episodes from a man’s life, arranged not chronologically but by emotional weight. The prose is rich but controlled. Fuentes balances political critique with psychological depth, never letting one overwhelm the other. Alfred MacAdam’s English translation captures the rhythmic intensity of the original Spanish. If you want something shorter first, consider Aura (1962), a brief gothic novella that can be read in a single sitting.
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