A brave, New World (People finders) of Latin literature
In his new novel, "Lost City Radio" (HarperCollins, $24.95), young Peruvian-born writer Daniel Alarc n has created a world that seems to exist simultaneously in the future and the distant past. It's a nameless war-torn country that bears some resemblance to the futuristic dystopias of "1984" and "Brave New World." But television and the Internet don't exist. People queue up to make long-distance ...
The young Peruvian-born writer's new novel, "Lost City," is a futuristic dystopia set in a nameless, war-torn country. OAKLAND In his new novel, "Lost City Radio," young Peruvian-born writer Daniel Alarc n has created a world that seems to exist simultaneously in the future and the distant past.
The young Peruvian-born writer's new novel, "Lost City," is a futuristic dystopia set in a nameless, war-torn country. OAKLAND In his new novel, "Lost City Radio," young Peruvian-born writer Daniel Alarc n has created a world that seems to exist simultaneously in the future and the distant past.




