Boulder (novel)

The novel follows the eponymous main character as the couple moves to Reykjavík, Samsa has a child, and Boulder navigates how the resulting changes in their relationship clash with her desire for freedom.

He mentions that in the way motherhood changes the "delightfully complex protagonist lies the source of this novel’s magnetism.

"[1] Patrick Graney, in a review for The Times, compared it to Baltasar's previous novel Permafrost saying that Boulder's "depiction of parenthood and its particular challenges in same-sex relationships" was similar to Permafrost's "[exploration] of the tensions between a lesbian narrator and her seemingly heteronormative family.

[2] J. Ernesto Ayala-Dip complimented the lyrical quality of the writing and called Baltasar one of the most important names in contemporary Catalan literature.

[3] The judges for the International Booker Prize described it as "[an] incisive story of queer love and motherhood that slices open the dilemmas of exchanging independence for intimacy.