Description
Fiction. Latinx Studies. LGBTQIA Studies. Translated from the Spanish by Jennifer Donovan. What does it mean to be? And to be different? Gabriela Torres Olivares poses these questions as she writes in the space between her characters' bodies, desires, and experiences. With a constantly shifting gaze, these fifteen stories explore the profundity of otherness across beings and quasi beings, seeking out both discomfort and common ground. In her ENFERMARIO, part infirmary and part bestiary, Gabriela Torres Olivares invites us into her characters' worlds only to defamiliarize the quotidian and thus challenge our most basic preconceptions.
"Gabriela Torres Olivares is one of my favorite living writers; her sentences are devastating, beautiful, utterly desired, and then, are like the skin that needs to be shed off in cycles. After all, we are reptilian. The words are wounds and portals, and her narratives somehow puncture into the heart of what it means to be a human among other humans, monstrous, touching, apparitions of each other and of the disappearing myths that are still embedded in our bloodstream. The stories in ENFERMARIO exist somehow as the sediment for our current condition, as the evidence of our sad secrets, and as the inflections of our uncanny and everyday cognition." —Janice Lee
Author Bio
Gabriela Torres Olivares was born in Monterrey, México. She is the author of three collections of short stories: ENFERMARIO (2010), which Reforma named as one of the Best Books of 2010; Incompletario (2007); and Están Muertos (2004). Her work has appeared in numerous anthologies and periodicals, including Vice, Pic-Nic, Playboy, and Luvina. She received a 2015-16 grant from the National Fund for Culture and Arts to complete a novel.
Author City: San Diego, CA USA