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Comemadre CHPbeta

Comemadre CHPbeta

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Comemadre CHPbeta

Comemadre CHPbeta

$ 16.95

$ 22.85

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Product Details

A novel by Roque Larraquy, translated by Heather Cleary

July 10, 2018 5 x 7.75 152 pages 978-1-56689-515-6

Literary Latin American Flatliners: a smart, engrossing, and darkly funny novel experimenting with where life and love begin and end.

On the outskirts of Buenos Aires in 1907, Doctor Quintana pines for head nurse Menndez while he and his colleagues embark on a grisly series of experiments to investigate the line between life and death. One hundred years later, a celebrated artist goes to extremes in search of aesthetic transformation, turning himself into an art object. How far are we willing to go, Larraquy asks, in pursuit of transcendence? The world of Comemadre is full of vulgarity, excess, and farce: strange ants that form almost perfect circles, missing body parts, obsessive love affairs, and flesh-eating plants. Here the monstrous is not alien, but the consequence of our relentless pursuit of collective and personal progress.

About the Author

Roque Larraquy is an Argentinianwriter, screenwriter, professor of narrative and audiovisual design, and the author of two books, La comemadre and Informe sobre ectoplasma animal. Comemadre will be his first book published in English.

Heather Clearys translations include Csar Rendueless Sociophobia, Sergio Chejfecs The Planets and The Dark, and a selection of Oliverio Girondos poetry for New Directions.


Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please email us at.

Reviews

Longlisted for the 2018 National Book Award for Translated Literature
Longlisted for the Best Translated Book Award
Publishers Weekly, Best Books of 2018 in Fiction


Shuttling between B-movie horror and exceedingly dark comedy, the novel is somehow both genuinely scary and genuinely funny, sometimes on the same pagea wickedly entertaining ride.Publishers Weekly,starred review

Grotesque, outrageous, and insanely funny, [Comemadre] has almost no equal in literature.BOMB

Sad, funny, and pitch-perfect. World Literature Today

The prose is distilled but richlike dark chocolate.Chicago Tribune

Through his callous, narcissistic narrators, Larraquy interrogates the ethics of art and science, and the inhumanity we sanction in the name of intellectual achievement. Slyly funny and viscerally affecting, in a fluid translation by Heather Cleary, Comemadre is the medicine-meets-art horror story of my dreams. Huffington Post

The absurd is planted and buried throughoutComemadre,creating a sense of constant doubt and uncertainty. The writing is sparse and evocative, even as it takes considerable risks. The effect accomplishes a great deal in short spaces.Full Stop

Comemadrecreates a full circle of the grotesqueries humans inflict upon one another in pursuit of immortality. . . . Read Larraquy to experience a strange waking dream from which there is no escape.Arkansas International

Its a brief novel, but its impact is massive.Vol. 1 Brooklyn

A mutilated novel about the art of mutilating bodies. Book Post

In this dark, dense, surprisingly short debut novel by the Argentinian author, were confronted with enough grotesqueries to fill a couple Terry Gilliam films and, more importantly, with the idea that the only real monsters are those that are formed out of our own ambition.The Millions

Comemadre is a powerful critique of our administered, bureaucratic world, full of petty men wielding power with impunity. Three Percent

Layered without growing dense, the book is crisply comic, scenes punctuated like punchlines. That it all happens within a mere 130 pages is a sort of magic trickthe dizzying kind where a body gets sawed in half. The A.V. Club

Reading Roque Larraquys excellent and twisted novel Comemadre is an exercise in duality: mind and body, present and past, science and art. New Letters

A deeply unnerving and morbidly fascinating novel.Booklist

Larraquy ventures into the gothic here, only to push beyond it into an even more disquieting realm of obsession, transformation, and the monstrous unknown.Words Without Borders

Funny, grotesque and smart.Brazos Bookstore

The gruesome content is handled with an absurdist touch.Publishers Weekly

A concise family saga by way of Dennis Cooper by way of a stress nightmare; its also eminently readable. Vol. 1 Brooklyn

[Comemadre] spins old unreliable narrator techniques into a freshly comic and grotesque examination of the various ways that we try to justify the unjustifiable. Barrelhouse

Comemadre has wit in excess, spilling out over the pages, like an army of red ants, or the pools beneath a guillotine. Fanzine

A masterpiece in regards to dark comedy. Call Me [Brackets]

A strange, wild story-slash-philosophical-meander along the lines of art, life, love, and death.Remezcla

One of the most bizarre, darkly comic and fascinating books that Ive read this year.Beyond the Epilogue

I loveComemadre. But here I am, days after reading, still asking myself what kind of book it is. Is it humor? Horror? Is it about art? Science? Philosophy? One thing is certain: it is just the kind of book that youll want to recommend to your friends over and over again, and here I am, still doing it!Samanta Schweblin

Like a beloved B movie, this is the campy horror show all my fellow sickos have been waiting for.Keaton Patterson

Larraquy has written a perfect novel: spare, urgent, funny, original, and infused with wonderfully subtle grace. I neglected my domestic duties to devour it.Elisa Albert

Moving from a sanatorium at the beginning of the twentieth century in which the doctors decide to use their patients as fodder for a deadly experiment, to an artist at the beginning of the twenty-first who pushes the fleshy manipulations of Chris Burden and Damien Hurst to a new extreme,Comemadreis a raucous and irreverent philosophical meditation on the relationship of the body to science and to art. Walking a line between parody and critique, this is a grotesquely funny and powerful book.Brian Evenson

Comemadreis one of the wildest and most disturbing novels Ive read. With a language that dissects the world while describing it, Roque Larraquy constructs a dark fable about the annihilation of the body, about perversions of art and science. Heather Clearys magnificent translation does justice to this extravagant gemcomposed like a Hieronymus Bosch diptych that sets us before the monsters of unleashed reason.Daniel Saldaa Pars

Comemadreis a sensory experience: images repeat, confession has a smell, and obsession feels palpable. The two narrative threads within this wildly strange and perversely humorous novel map the expansive life of the mind, the drive to make a mark on history, and the impact of transgressions in art and science. If a Dal painting could speak, it would tell us this violently charming tale of ants marching in perfect circles and bodies pushed beyond the limits of the possible.Elizabeth Willis, Avid Bookshop

Im not entirely sure what the fuck just happened, but, whatever you might say about Roque LarraquysComemadre,you sure as hell will havesomethingto say. A dizzying, macabre, yet ultimately deliriously delicious tale of medical testing, decapitations, botanically-born flesh-eating larvae, unrequited love, deformities, and extreme art,Comemadrewont soon be easily forgotten (if ever it is). Larraquy, an Argentinean screenwriter who has also penned two books (Comemadrebeing the first translated into English), is whirlwindishly creative and evidently possessed of a prodigious, if darkly tinged, imagination.

Two distinct narratives, ultimately linked yet set 102 years apart, combine to grotesque and lasting effect. Larraquy writes fantastically and, however unlikely it may seem given its obsessive subjects, with considerable humor. The same unsettling, disquieting feeling one might be left with after engaging, say, Georges BataillesThe Story of the Eyeor fellow Argentinean author Samanta SchweblinsFever Dreamis present in spades.Comemadrenever flinches, however much its readers inevitably must.Comemadrelures, bedevils, and ultimately enamorsdistending reality (and decency) in the process. Feral fiction at its finest, Larraquys Comemadre is beach reading if you inexplicably find yourself marooned with Piggy, Jack, Ralph, and the rest of Goldings deserted island boys.Jeremy Garber, Powells Books

Part horror, part dark comedy, part philosophy. Unabridged Bookstore

Praise for Roque Larraquy:

Who the devil is this Roque Larraquy? His first book seems like an artifact written with four handsamid laughter and hidden from everyoneby Jorge Luis Borges and Witold Gombrowicz. Or maybe not Gombrowicz, but Virgilio Piera. Or maybe not Borges, but Villiers de LIsle-Adam adapted by Paul Valry (did you know Valry spent his youth digging up skulls to make calculations?). What is certain is that this truly magnificent novel exudes intelligence, humor, cynicism, cruelty. Cold passion with unsettlingand unexpectedly movingeffects.Ignacio Echevarra

In spite of having all the necessary ingredients for a historical novel (the clinic, sordid and suburban; the positivist, anthropometric delusions), its not a historical novel; in spite of possessing, at first glance, the traits that generally mark realistic fiction, (the cross between conceptual art, spectacle, and biopolitics; the gray areas of death, sickness and animalism as thresholds of humanity), something in its tone subjects the reality to a process of distancing treating it as a foreign bodyalienneither completely alive nor completely dead.Diego Peller,Bazar Americano

Larraquy spent seven years writing his first book . . . and another three passed before the appearance of his second. We dont know how long it will take him to publish his next one, but we intuit that there will be a third and a fourth, because in what weve seen of his work up to now there is a discernible literary projecta project thats difficult to define, for which terms like story, novel, or poetry are insufficient.Maximiliano Tomas, La Nacin

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