Patricia Ratto

Patricia Ratto (born 1962) is an Argentine teacher and writer who lives and works in Tandil, a small town in southern Buenos Aires Province. She has written and published the following novels: Pequeños hombres blancos (Adriana Hidalgo, 2006), Nudos (Adriana Hidalgo, 2008), and Trasfondo (Adriana Hidalgo, 2012).

Writing

Pequeños hombres blancos is the tale of a provincial teacher, set during the Argentine dictatorship of the 1970s.[1] The heroine of Nudos is a social worker whose job opens onto a whole set of stories from figures on the margins of Argentine society. Tandil's El eco described it as "exceed[ing] all expectations."[2]

But Ratto is probably best known for Trasfondo, a fictional reconstruction of the submarine the ARA San Luis's contribution to the Falklands/Malvinas War. For many weeks, after the sinking of the General Belgrano and the subsequent return of the Argentine fleet to port, the San Luis was the only Argentine ship at sea in the war zone.[3] Ratto portrays the isolation of the submarine and its crew, who are almost perpetually submerged and see little more than fog on the few occasions they surface. Ultimately it is revealed that the novel's narrator, a sailor who seems to interact little with his crewmates, has died before the ship even sets sail. As he ponders as one point in the narrative: "Can one really die and not know it?"[4]

Writing in La nación, Osvaldo Quiroga commends Ratto's prose style for its "rare beauty and admirable precision."[5] The critic Martín Kohan, meanwhile, compares Trasfondo to Fogwill's celebrated Malvinas Requiem (Los pichiciegos), observing that while "Fogwill's pichiciegos [. . .] see ghosts briefly, Ratto's sailors, in their submarine war, are ghosts throughout."[6]

List of works

Notes

  1. "Pequeños hombres blancos." La nación (October 9, 2006).
  2. Carolina Cordi, "Nudos, la segunda novela de Patricia Ratto redobla la apuesta y desafía al lector atento." El eco (August 13, 2008).
  3. Lessons of the Falklands. Department of the Navy (Report). DTIC. February 1983. ADA133333. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  4. Ratto 2012, p. 71
  5. Osvaldo Quiroga, "Malvinas y sus fantasmas". La nación (April 7, 2012).
  6. Kohan 2014, p. 288

References

External links

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