Mario Vargas Llosa Books in Order: Complete Bibliography & Best Starting Points
Mario Vargas Llosa's complete bibliography in order — from Conversation in the Cathedral and The War of the End of the World to The Feast of the Goat. Best starting points.
Mario Vargas Llosa is the Nobel Prize-winning Peruvian novelist — the writer who, with García Márquez and Borges, makes up the triumvirate of Latin American literature in the second half of the twentieth century, and whose political fiction (about dictatorship, power, corruption, and resistance) is among the most historically ambitious in world literature.
Born in Arequipa, Peru in 1936, he was educated in Peru, Bolivia, and Spain, and has spent most of his adult life in Europe. He ran for the Peruvian presidency in 1990, losing to Alberto Fujimori. He has published twenty novels, numerous plays, essays, and literary criticism, and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010.
Where to Start
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (1977)
The best starting point — Vargas Llosa’s most accessible and most entertaining novel. Mario, a young radio journalist in Lima, falls in love with his divorced Aunt Julia (who is eighteen years older) while working alongside Pedro Camacho, a Bolivian scriptwriter whose radio soap operas become increasingly deranged. The alternation between Mario’s romantic comedy and Camacho’s increasingly unhinged scripts is a sustained formal joke and a meditation on the relationship between life and fiction.
The Political Masterworks
Conversation in the Cathedral (1969)
The masterpiece — formally demanding, historically comprehensive, and one of the great political novels of the twentieth century. A four-hour conversation between Santiago Zavala and Ambrosio (his father’s former driver) in a bar called the Cathedral weaves between multiple time periods and perspectives, building a comprehensive portrait of Peru under the Odría dictatorship and asking the central question of Vargas Llosa’s work: at what moment did Peru destroy itself? Requires patience and attention; rewards both absolutely.
The Feast of the Goat (2000)
The most accessible of the major political novels — three narrative strands about the last days of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic and its aftermath. Urania Cabral returns to Santo Domingo after thirty-five years to confront what happened to her family; the narrative alternates between her return, Trujillo’s final day, and the plotters who killed him. The most fully realised portrait of Caribbean dictatorship in fiction, and the best demonstration of what political fiction can do at the level of individual human psychology.
The War of the End of the World (1981)
Vargas Llosa’s most ambitious novel in scale — a reconstruction of the Canudos War in northeastern Brazil in the 1890s, when a millenarian community gathered around the prophet Antonio the Counselor was destroyed by the Brazilian government in four military campaigns. The novel draws on Euclides da Cunha’s history Os Sertões and constructs a panoramic narrative of utopia, religious fanaticism, and military violence.
Complete Bibliography (Major Works)
| Title | Year | Note |
|---|---|---|
| The Time of the Hero | 1963 | First novel; military school; Lima |
| The Green House | 1966 | Peru; complex; admired |
| Conversation in the Cathedral | 1969 | Masterpiece; demanding |
| Pantaleón and the Visitors | 1973 | Comedy; military; Peruvian Amazon |
| Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter | 1977 | Best starting point; accessible |
| The War of the End of the World | 1981 | Brazil; epic; historical |
| The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta | 1984 | Leftist guerrilla; Peru |
| Who Killed Palomino Molero? | 1986 | Short; detective; Peru |
| The Storyteller | 1987 | Amazon; oral tradition |
| In Praise of the Stepmother | 1988 | Erotic; playful |
| Death in the Andes | 1993 | Sendero Luminoso; Peru |
| The Feast of the Goat | 2000 | Most accessible political fiction |
| The Way to Paradise | 2003 | Gauguin; Flora Tristan |
| The Bad Girl | 2006 | Love story; Lima-Paris |
| The Dream of the Celt | 2010 | Roger Casement; colonialism |
| The Discreet Hero | 2013 | Peru; older character |
| The Neighbourhood | 2016 | Lima; press; Fujimori era |
Reading Order Recommendations
New to Vargas Llosa: Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter → The Feast of the Goat → Conversation in the Cathedral.
Political fiction: The Feast of the Goat → The War of the End of the World → Conversation in the Cathedral.
Complete essential: Conversation in the Cathedral → Aunt Julia → The Feast of the Goat → The War of the End of the World.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best Vargas Llosa novel to start with?
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (1977) is the best starting point — it is Vargas Llosa's most accessible and most amusing novel, a semi-autobiographical comedy about a young Peruvian writer's love affair with his divorced aunt, interwoven with the increasingly deranged soap opera scripts of a Bolivian radio scriptwriter. More accessible than his major political novels, it demonstrates Vargas Llosa's narrative invention and his ability to interweave multiple stories. The Feast of the Goat is the best starting point for readers who want his political fiction — an account of the last days of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic.
What is Conversation in the Cathedral about?
Conversation in the Cathedral (1969) is generally considered Vargas Llosa's masterpiece — a formally complex novel about Peru under the dictatorship of Odría in the 1950s, structured around a conversation between Santiago, a disillusioned son of the Peruvian elite, and Ambrosio, his father's former driver, at a bar called the Cathedral. The novel weaves between multiple time periods and perspectives through dialogue, and its central question — 'At what exact moment had Peru fucked itself up?' — applies to both Santiago's personal life and the country's political history. Very demanding formally but enormously rewarding.
What is The Feast of the Goat about?
The Feast of the Goat (2000) is set in the Dominican Republic during the final days of Rafael Trujillo's dictatorship and its immediate aftermath. Three narrative strands alternate: the aging Trujillo on the day of his assassination (1961), the conspiracy to kill him, and a woman returning to the Dominican Republic after thirty-five years to confront the trauma the Trujillo years inflicted on her family. The novel is Vargas Llosa's most accessible political fiction and a comprehensive portrait of what dictatorship does to individuals and societies.
Did Vargas Llosa win the Nobel Prize?
Yes — Mario Vargas Llosa won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010, for his 'cartography of structures of power and his trenchant images of the individual's resistance, revolt, and defeat.' He was born in Peru in 1936, has lived in various European cities, held dual Peruvian-Spanish citizenship, and ran unsuccessfully for the Peruvian presidency in 1990. He has been one of the most politically engaged of the major Latin American writers — initially on the left, later on the liberal right — and his political positions have informed both his fiction and his extensive journalism and essays.



