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Not a River
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Not a River by Selva Almada
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I hope you and your family are ok Gail


Has anyone read up on the author? I can try to find some stuff this weekend.

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I have not - that would be great, Jen. I’d love to know more about her.
I started the other day and want to whiteboard the characters. She shifts back and forth in time enough that I was getting confused. (A me problem, not the author). There’s something about her writing style I’m loving, but I’m unable to identify it yet.


Selva Almada is an Argentinian writer born April 5, 1973. She has 4 books translated to English- 3 novels/novellas and one nonfiction. It is said that the three novels translated to English are also known as “the trilogy of men”. So we are reading the final part.
Author’s Works, links to come.
2003: Mal de muñecas. Poetry
2005: Niños. Novella
2007: Una chica de provincia. Short stories
2012: El viento que arrasa. Novel
(2019: The Wind That Lays Waste, English translation by Chris Andrews)
2012: Intemec. Short stories
2013: Ladrilleros. Novel
(2021: Brickmakers, English translation by Annie McDermott)
2014: Chicas muertas. Nonfiction
(2020: Dead Girls, English translation by Annie McDermott)
2015: El desapego es una manera de querernos. Short stories (compilation)
2017: El mono en el remolino: Notas del Rodaje de Zama de Lucrecia Martel.
2021: No es un río. Novel
(2024: Not a River, English translation by Annie McDermott)
Her accolades include:
2010: Fondo Nacional de las Artes Fellowship
2014: Finalist for the Tigre Juan Award for Ladrilleros
2015: Finalist for the Rodolfo Walsh Award for Chicas Muertas
2024: Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize for Not a River
2025: Longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award for Not a River

That is the intro preceding an interview with the author here:
https://courier.unesco.org/en/article...
From the Booker Prize and the International Literature Festival Berlin, I see her style is compared to Faulkner, as well as others:
“Almada works in the tradition of William Faulkner and major Latin American novelists, that is, with a confident prose that moves easily between the poetic and the hyper real. Critics characterize her as an author of unusual strength who succeeds in reinventing the pastoral world of Argentina.”
https://literaturfestival.com/en/auth...
The Booker site includes two more links- to Q&A with the author and translator as well as a reading guide.
https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booke...

The characters in my novel, men and women who live on what the river can provide, are a reflection of what the neo-liberalism of the 1990s has done to Argentina: impoverishing it, condemning a significant part of its citizens to poverty and marginalization.
I hadn't paid attention to the fact there are two other novels that precede it, I think it can easily stand alone. I have since obtained Brickmakers and Dead Girls and will read those, perhaps this month, since it seems timely.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Wind that Lays Waste (other topics)Not a River (other topics)
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