Before this novel, Mendoza wrote La ciudad de los umbrales (The City of Thresholds), where he introduced the character of and the secret society known as El Reino de las Redes (The Kingdom of Networks). El Libro de las Revelaciones (often considered the second volume in the cycle) takes the existential dread of its predecessor and amplifies it to apocalyptic extremes. Plot Overview: The Descent of Ángel Macías The protagonist of El Libro de las Revelaciones is not a detective or a hero. He is Ángel Macías , a literature professor and chronic insomniac living in a soulless Bogotá. Ángel suffers from what he calls "the white noise"—a metaphysical static that drowns out meaning. He is a man buried alive by routine, haunted by the death of his sister, and increasingly unable to distinguish dreams from reality.
The catalyst for the novel occurs when Ángel discovers a hidden manuscript—the eponymous "Libro de las Revelaciones." It is not the Biblical Apocalypse of Saint John, but a secret text supposedly written by a mad monk during the Crusades. This book does not predict the end of the world; it describes how to see the world as it truly is: a fragile membrane stretched over a boiling sea of chaos. mario mendoza el libro de las revelaciones
The true "revelation" of the book is Mendoza’s thesis: El mal no está afuera. Está en la estructura. (Evil is not outside. It is in the structure.) Before this novel, Mendoza wrote La ciudad de