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Acclaimed Colombian author Héctor Abad will be in London in September

to launch the UK edition of Oblivion, translated by Rosalind Harvey and Anne McLean.

He’ll be appearing at the British Library, London on 19 September – tickets are available here.

Described by Fatima Bhutto as ‘a book so beautiful, it is a treasure and a heartbreak to read’ and by John Coetzee as ‘a tragic and unforgettable history’, Oblivion is a heartbreaking tribute to the author’s father, Héctor Abad Gómez.  His father was a medical doctor, university professor, and human-rights leader who set up public-health programmes for the poor in Medellín, Colombia’s second-largest city.

But his criticism of the Colombian regime led to his brutal murder by paramilitaries in 1987. It was twenty years before Abad could start to tell his father’s story.

Oblivion paints an unforgettable picture of a man who followed his conscience and paid for it with his life during one of the darkest periods in Latin America’s recent history. Transcending the political, it also shines as one of the most exquisitely written accounts of profound love between a father and son that modern literature has to offer.