Pedro Páramo

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Pedro Páramo
Written by: Juan Rulfo
Central Theme: caudillism and provincial decadence.
Synopsis: A young man goes to his now ghostly birth town to meet again with his father, the titular character. Said man has a complicated past and a heavy hand on why the town in question is ghostly now.
Genre(s): Magical Realism
First published: 1955
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"Illusion? That is expensive. To me living costed much more than it was due" --as said by a dead woman.

Pedro Páramo is a 1955 novel, a poetic and extremely sad novel by Juan Rulfo. It is ostensibly about the illegitimate son (Juan Preciado) of the title character returning to his father's hometown of Comala as a last request to his mother - to get back what his father owes him. It's considered by some one of the best Mexican novels, ever, and is a classic of Hispanic literature and even global literature, depending on who you ask.

In reality, the book documents the rise and fall of both Pedro and the Town, shifting constantly from person to person and back and forth in time. Comala is the Ghost Town (in more ways than one) trope taken to its extreme: most of its habitants are ghosts and/or memories unaware of their deaths, and it is notoriously difficult both for Preciado and for the reader to tell between the living and dead. Comala, though dangerous in its own quiet way as Preciado's spontaneous death midway through can probably attest, is not so much creepy as it is as a melancholic place lingering with the defeat of death and forgetting. This being Magical Realism it still manages to be eccentric and even somewhat funny.

Tropes used in Pedro Páramo include:
  • Anachronic Order: and how.
  • Book Ends: The novel begins and ends on Abundio
  • Broken Bird: Several characters, especially Dolores, the narrator's mother.
  • Brother-Sister Incest: Implied between the two naked people Juan runs into as he explores the town. It Makes Sense in Context.
  • Byronic Hero: the titular man.
  • The Casanova: Pedro and his son Miguel (the only one he considers legitimate) are both of the monster variety
  • Dead All Along: Everyone. Including the narrator. Possibly
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Pedro's father, Lucas, is killed in a wedding by an unknown man. So he kills every single person that attended the wedding. Ant that's only one of such acts he commits.
  • Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory: One of many, many ways to interpret the novel
  • Film of the Book: the book has several adaptations, an old one from old Mexican cinema and a more recent one.
  • Generation Xerox: Pedro and Miguel Páramo.
  • Ghost Town: Comala may be the ultimate example, both literary and figuratively.
  • Heroic Bastard: Juan Preciado may or may not count, as he was born from Pedro Páramo's only real marriage (even tough it is ambiguously implied he may be Damiana's son) but didn't inherit the last name and was never acknowledged by Pedro. Miguel Páramo is more of an Anti-heroic Bastard, and so is Abundio.
  • High Octane Nightmare Fuel: the book is too passive to be truly scary, but some things are definitively terrifying if you think about them for too long. Juan listening the screams of a murdered man in Edúviges's inn, the whole living vs dead confusion and especially Juan dying absolutely out of nowhere.
  • Hormone-Addled Teenager: Susana
  • Magical Realism: Considered by many to be the Trope Maker.
  • Meaningful Name: at first it seems so but the truth is much more complicated. Juan Rulfo was known for his habit of wandering cemeteries and using the names in the tombs for his stories. All named characters got their names that way, but he still chose them accordingly: "Páramo" means "wasteland", "Preciado" means "prized, beloved", and much more.
  • Mexican Revolution: indirectly affects the plot.
  • Mind Screw
  • Moral Event Horizon: The priest refuses absolution to Miguel at his funeral, after Miguel killed his brother and raped his sister.
  • Seeker Archetype: Juan Preciado.
  • Self-Made Orphan: Pedro Páramo is killed by Abundio Martínez, one of his many illegitimate sons.
  • Parental Incest: Implied between Susana and her father.
  • Theme Naming: a large amount of characters have biblical names, which is completely accurate from a Mexican village.