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Synopsis:
Simón López Trujillo’s “mind-blowing” (Gabriela Cabezón Cámara) debut takes readers into a dry and degraded, fire-prone landscape where humanity has encroached a step too far into the natural world, and a deadly fungus mounts its own resistance . . .
In the disorienting, devastatingly tense world of López Trujillo, a eucalyptus farm worker named Pedro starts coughing. Several of his coworkers die of a strange fungal disease, which has jumped to humans for the first time, but Pedro, miraculously, awakes. His survival fascinates a foreign mycologist, as well as a local priest, who dubs his mysterious mutterings to be the words of a prophet. Meanwhile Pedro’s kids are left to fend for themselves: the young Cata, whose creepy art projects are getting harder and harder to decipher, and Patricio, who wasn’t ready to be thrust into the role of father. Their competing efforts to reckon with Pedro’s condition eventually meet in a horrifying climax that readers will never forget.
For readers of Jeff Vandermeer and Samanta Schweblin, López Trujillo is a next-generation Bolaño with a fresh, speculative edge and a mind that’s always one step ahead of us.
Review:
Scientists have learned that fungi communicates with one another through electrical pulses that travel underground through the Mycorrhizal network. They have learned there are at least fifty specific patterns they consider to be words and phrases that fungi use to talk to the entire network. Some of this communication is about placement of resources and to relay environmental dangers and stresses. The discovery of all of this is still unfolding, but the findings so far is that all of the fungi in the forest is communicating in a way that turns all fungi into one single minded organism, connected to through the Earth and showing the way for survival.
I think about this when I read Pedro the Vast, the new eco-disaster fiction novella by Chilean author Simón López Trujillo. The story is about a eucalyptus farm worker named Pedro who starts coughing. He ends up with a fungal disease that has been killing his coworkers. He does get sick, sick enough to be in the hospital while his two children, Cata and Patricio, fend for themselves the best they can. Pedro finally wakes up, the only person with this infection who has lived, but he is definitely not the same. He starts saying all kind of things that do not make sense to anyone except to a cult who thinks Pedro is connected to the network of the universe, through the mycorrhizal network. There are many other threads the show up, like corporate greed, like globalization destroying local culture by connect it to the network, like knowing that scientific research relies on corporate funding and livelihood, like how people who die in work accidents and hazards have to fight to become recognized as a person who was once part of the huge network.
The feeling of this book, the true feeling that Simón López Trujillo shows us is that we also have a network that connects us all, a communication that we use that is not overt and obvious but is happening. When someone is pulled out of that network, they are lost (the children without their father) or excommunicated (like those families trying to get settlements and corporate responsibility for their loved one’s death). The person stuck in the middle of this, showing this community that there is more connection between everyone and everything is Pedro, or at least a form of Pedro being used by the fungi as a conduit for their message. There are scenes in this book that on the surface seem to be out of place or irrelevant, but what Pedro is saying is that everything is relevant, that the entire world is a vast network, but we don’t treat it this way. Simón López Trujillo uses this idea in everything that happens in Pedro the Vast. Even with the children getting a PS5 and playing a soccer game. They play this game over a network that connects them with other players around the world playing at the same time. They might not always be online, but there is still communication that happens between people playing a video game, connecting everyone to one big network.
Pedro the Vast is a slim, densely written, poetic novel. There are moments when it feels like this is just a great deal of depth into something that is senseless, but at the core, the idea of the vastness of the world and how everything is connected in more ways that we think comes across loud and clear. I did not know how much I would liked the book while I was reading it, but considering the story has made me ask questions and think about it for a week since I finished it lets me know it would be wrong if I said this was not an impactful and impressive piece of social commentary through storytelling…and fungi.








