ACCORDING to my books-review app, I read Amulet for the first time from March 09, 2025 to March 15, 2025.
An attempt to reconstruct, recall, remember what motivated me to read the novel brings forth an image to mind. I must looked up books included in previously taught courses. Amulet was listed. I loan it from the library. I read it.

SAVED ON MY GALLERY is an imagine dated March 13, 2025. I must have been at a table. Logging my thoughts of Amulet into a books-reviewing platform.
My re-read for this class is marked with nostalgia. Because I loved this book again. Once again: I am introduced to Auxilio.
“My name is Auxilio Lacouture and I am Uruguayan—I come from Montevideo—although when I get nostalgic, when homesickness wells up and overwhelms me, I say I’m a Charrúa, which is more or less the same thing, though not exactly, and it confuses Mexicans and other Latin Americans too” (4).
Alcira Soust Scaffo (1924-1997). Uruguayan teacher and poet.

From the beginning, Axulio’s voice is a first-person account. Her imagination is vivid. Auxilio Lacouture’s narration in Amulet enacts rhizomatic thought (as proposed by A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari, 1980) through its nonlinear temporality, associative logic, and dispersed subjectivity. For instance, she “I came to Mexico City in 1967, or maybe it was 1965, or 1962. I’ve got no memory for dates anymore, or exactly where my wanderings took me; all I know is that I came to Mexico and never went back. Hold on, let me try to remember” (4)
Auxilio’s narrator is as she thinks. Train of thoughts are palpable. It is interior character monologue. It is associative, following non-linear thoughts, always reminiscing on the scene of the days in the bathroom.
“Then I heard a murmur that rose through the cold air of evening in the valley toward the mountainsides and crags, and I was astonished. They were singing. The children, the young people, were singing and heading for the abyss. I raised a hand to my mouth, as if to stifle a shout, and held the other hand out in front of me, fingers extended and trembling, as if trying to touch them. My mind endeavored to remember a text about children intoning canticles as they marched to war. But it was no use. My mind was inside out. The journey through the snow had turned me into skin. Perhaps that is how I had always been. Intelligence has never been my strength” (89)
This is important as the text’s format parallels the protagonist-narrator’s inner world, repeating the same memories, jumping between narrations of different temporalities.
In another instance, while at the bathroom, Auxilio’s narration goes on a “time-capsule” to predict the future of that era and predecessor literary scenes.
“…A statue of Nicanor Parra, however, shall stand in a Chilean square in the year 2059. A statue of Octavio Paz shall stand in a Mexican square in the year 2020. A rather small statue of Ernesto Cardenal shall stand in a Nicaraguan square in the year 2018.But all statues tumble eventually, by divine intervention or the power of dynamite, like the statue of Heine. So let us not place too much trust in statues. Carson McCullers, however, shall go on being read in the year 2100. Alejandra Pizarnik shall lose her last reader in the year 2100. Alfonsina Storni shall be reincarnated as a cat or a sea-lion, I can’t tell which, in the year 2050. The case of Anton Chekhov shall be slightly different: he shall be reincarnated in the year 2003, in the year 2010, and then in the year 2014. He shall appear once more in the year 2081. And never again after that. Alice Sheldon shall appeal to the masses in the year 2017. Alfonso Reyes shall be killed once and for all in the year 2058, but in fact it shall be Reyes who kills his killers. Marguerite Duras shall live in the nervous system of thousands of women in the year 2035…” (79).
Marguerite Duras (1914 Gia Dinh, French Indo China – 1996, Paris France) novelist, filmmaker, playwright



Moreover, Auxilio also daydreams conversations with then-defunct Remedios Varo (1908–1963)


IN page 98, Auxilio’s train of thought goes as follow: “I was back in the women’s bathroom on the fourth floor of the Faculty of Philosophy and Literature and it was September 1968 and I was thinking about the adventures of Remedios Varo. There are so few people left who remember Remedios Varo. I never met her. I would sincerely love to be able to say that I’d met her, but the truth is that I never did. I have known marvelous women, strong as mountains or ocean currents, but I never met Remedios Varo. Not because I was too timid to pay her a visit at her house, not because I didn’t admire her work (which I admire wholeheartedly), but because Remedios Varo died in 1963, and in 1963 I was still living in my beloved, faraway Montevideo”. Auxilio admits she has never met Varo. Yet further up the text, she imagines, daydreams a memory of meeting and visiting Varo. Auxilio exhibits narration filling in gaps of memory, wherein imagined encounters (e.g., with Remedios Varo) are integrated into autobiographical memory. Thus, the memory of the bathroom scene becomes layered: as Auxilio revisits it, imagined encounters (such as with Remedios Varo) are folded into the narration, not as stable facts, but as associative extensions of memory itself.
PERSONAL COMMENTARY
[On the pretext..]
Amulet is dedicated “For Mario Santiago Papasquiaro (Mexico City, 1953-1998).”
Mexican poet and co-founder of the infrarrealista poetry movement.


In our misery we wanted to scream for help, but there was no one there to come to our aid — Petronius
Beautiful dedication to his friend. I wonder the epigraph might have meant for them? \…/
“Alfonsina Storni shall be reincarnated as a cat or a sea-lion, I can’t tell which, in the year 2050.” Alfonsina Storni (1892-1938). Swiss-Argentine poet and playwright of the modernist period.


Does Alfonsina get to be a cat or sea-lion because just as Kate Chopin’s Edna Pontellier and Virginia Woolf, Alfonsina decided to drown? Axulio’s imagination surely does stretch.
Auxilio’s imagination stretches, folds, and reconfigures memory and history, creating a narrative both personal and mythic. In Amulet, there is imagination, associative leaps, and homage.












