Selvagens Gabriel Pasternak — Relatos
Pasternak, a fresh voice in contemporary transgressive fiction, has done something rare: he has written a book about anger that doesn’t feel whiny. It feels cathartic. "Relatos Selvagens" is not a novel but a mosaic of short stories. Each narrative strips away the "social mask" (the Jungian persona) to reveal the beast beneath. The settings are mundane: a towing lot, a wedding reception, a roadside diner, a first-class airplane cabin. The characters are familiar: the frustrated accountant, the jilted bride, the demolition expert with OCD.
We live in a hyper-regulated, hyper-polite society where road rage gets you fired and a snide comment on social media ruins your career. We swallow our anger daily. Pasternak’s characters are the ones who stop swallowing. They spit it out. relatos selvagens gabriel pasternak
Pasternak asks a terrifying question: What would you do if you knew, for certain, that there would be zero repercussions? Without spoiling the visceral punch of the collection, three stories stand out as masterclasses in tension: 1. "The Pasternak" (The Tow Truck) The opener is a brutal chess match between a white-collar businessman and a blue-collar tow truck driver. A mistaken parking ticket escalates into a war of attrition involving bird feces, a crowbar, and a car suspension. It is hilarious until it is horrifying. Pasternak uses this story to argue that class warfare isn't fought with policies, but with petty vengeance. 2. "The Feast of the Bride" Imagine The Menu meets Bridesmaids . A wedding reception where the discarded ex-lover spikes the cake with a cocktail of psychedelics and rage. The prose here is Pasternak at his most lyrical, describing the slow-motion collapse of designer clothes and polite conversation into a mud-soaked primal scream. 3. "Bomb Theory" A quiet, terrifying monologue from a demolition expert who lives next to a noisy music school. Unlike the other stories, no violence happens on the page. Instead, the narrator explains the chemistry of explosives in the same tone one uses to describe baking bread. It is the most "wild" tale because the savagery is entirely in the reader's imagination. Why It Resonates Right Now In an age of trigger warnings and emotional safety, why is a book called Wild Tales flying off the shelves? Each narrative strips away the "social mask" (the















