Margins
The Cowboy Bible and Other Stories book cover
The Cowboy Bible and Other Stories
2008
First Published
3.48
Average Rating
133
Number of Pages

"The Cowboy Bible will challenge readers to push beyond cultural stereotypes and rethink everything they know about northern Mexico and their homes." —NBC News “Playful and clever, inventive but familiar, this brief book is deeply satisfying, and warrants multiple readings.… In her translation, Obejas superbly amplifies Velázquez's style.” —Publishers Weekly Pick of the Week The English-language debut of “one of the most original and entertaining voices in contemporary Mexican literature” (Revista Gatopardo): a collection of surreal, ironic, and madcap stories about the comedy and brutality of life in Mexico. The provocateur and cult sensation Carlos Velázquez has earned comparisons to Hunter S. Thompson, Charles Bukowski, and William S. Burroughs, and has been called “a grand storyteller” (Diario Jornada) and “an icon” (Frente). In these seven surreal and unsettling tales, he portrays the comedy and brutality of a region that has captivated the North American imagination. Akin to Márquez’s Macondo or Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County, Velázquez’s PopSTock! is a fictional territory in a familiar but strange northern Mexico. Throughout the stories is woven the Cowboy Bible—a mystical and protean object that first appears as the talisman of a Santería-practicing luchador, DJ, and art critic, then later morphs into an unbeatable marathon drinker, a scion of a fried-chicken vendor dynasty who becomes a Communist guerilla freedom fighter, and the leather for a pair of boots so coveted that it leads a man to grant the devil a night with his wife. With such otherworldly scenarios, pop-culture panache, and Velázquez’s linguistic inventiveness, The Cowboy Bible is a brazen commentary on modern Mexican reality.

Avg Rating
3.48
Number of Ratings
433
5 STARS
18%
4 STARS
32%
3 STARS
34%
2 STARS
12%
1 STARS
4%
goodreads

Author

Carlos Velázquez
Carlos Velázquez
Author · 9 books
Carlos Velázquez (Coahuila, 1978) es autor de los libros de cuentos Cuco Sánchez blues (2004) y La Biblia Vaquera (nombrado entre los libros del año en 2009 por el periódico Reforma). Según Sergio González Rodríguez «es el libro que el norte inventó para explicarse a sí mismo» y está llamado «a cambiar la recepción y la percepción de la literatura mexicana y sus aires de altísima cultura hecha de mausoleos» (suplemento El Ángel), y que en palabras de Rafael Lemus, «es el producto más divertido e iconoclasta de la narrativa norteña» (Letras Libres). Velázquez recibió el Premio Nacional de Cuento Magdalena Mondragón y ha sido antologado en el Anuario de poesía mexicana 2007 del Fondo de Cultura Económica.
548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2026 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved