Death takes me

Cristina Rivera Garza, 1964-

Book - 2025

"A city is always a cemetery. When a professor named Cristina Rivera Garza stumbles upon the corpse of a man in a dark alley, she finds a stark warning scrawled on the brick wall beside the body, written in coral nail polish: "Beware of me, my love / beware of the silent woman in the desert." After reporting the crime to the police, the professor becomes the lead informant of the case, led by a detective with a newfound obsession with poetry and a long list of failures on her back. But what has the professor really seen? As more bodies of men are found across the city, the detective tries to decipher the meaning of the poems, and if they are facing a darker stream of violence spreading throughout the city. Death Takes Me is a... thrilling masterpiece of literary fiction that flips the traditional crime narrative on its head, in a world where death is rampant and violence is gendered. Written in sentences as sharp as the cuts on the bodies of the victims - a word which, in Spanish, is always feminine - Death Takes Me unfolds with the charged logic of a dream, moving from the professor's classroom into the slippery worlds of Latin American poetry and art, as it explores with masterful imagination the unstable terrains of desire and sexuality"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Romans
Published
New York, NY : Hogarth 2025.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Cristina Rivera Garza, 1964- (author)
Other Authors
Robin Myers, 1987- (translator), Sarah Booker
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593737002
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A poetry-obsessed serial killer mutilates men in this unforgettable literary puzzle from Rivera Garza, who won the Pulitzer for her memoir, Liliana's Invincible Summer. After a Mexican literature professor named Cristina Rivera Garza stumbles upon a castrated dead man while out jogging one night in her unnamed city, a police officer referred to only as the Detective investigates. Three more victims are found around the city--all with their genitals cut off. In each case, the killer leaves behind cryptic lines from the Argentine poet Alejandra Pizarnik, who died by suicide in 1972. The Detective and her assistant, Valerio, interview relatives of the victims and enlist Cristina's help in decoding Pizarnik's dark, fragmented poetry ("It's true, death takes me in the throes of sex"). Meanwhile, a reporter referred to as the Tabloid Journalist investigates the crimes on her own, and the plot thickens when the killer sends Cristina enigmatic letters written in Pizarnik's voice. Told in 97 brief chapters, the novel brilliantly melds the grit and pacing of a police procedural with literary theory, interweaving the investigation, Cristina's scholarship on Pizarnik, the killer's letters to Cristina, and a poetry manuscript by the killer entitled "Death Takes Me." It's all seamlessly conveyed in Rivera Garza's incisive and poetic style. Life and literature become one in this singular achievement. Agent: Jacqueline Ko, Wylie Agency. (Feb.)

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