Friday, August 22, 2025

Liliana's Invincible Summer by Cristina Rivera Garza

 



Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister's Search for Justice is a powerful and unforgettable book, emotionally difficult to handle at times although nothing in it is done for shock value. It’s the true crime story of the murder at age 20 of novelist Cristina Rivera Garca’s younger sister Liliana. The murderer was identified relatively quickly, yet also never caught.

But the book is much more than a horrifying crime story. Garza is one of the most narratively sophisticated novelists working right now. The point of view shifts, the non-linear timeline, the interviews conducted with others, the use of real diary entries, and maybe most of all the impressive eye for detail, make the work read like an experimental novel that, line by line, never stops being gripping. I wanted to look away but couldn’t look away. The story is horrible, but the writer’s approach shows why that story matters, rather than cheapening it.

The book is also deeply feminist, discussing the crucial need for women to gain more control over the narratives forced onto them in an anti-feminist social and cultural environment.  Things may have changed for women in Mexico since Liliana’s death in 1990, somewhat, but not as much as they need to, and the book never shies away from showing the problems both that women faced then and still do now.

It’s maybe not quite fair to either writer, but I kept thinking of Liliana’s Invincible Summer as an antidote to Roberto Bolaño’s novel 2666, or at least to the infamous long list of brutal murders that forms one of the sections of that novel. In Garza’s book, the focus is on just one murder, just one promising life destroyed by a young man’s murderous obsession.

Liliana Rivera Garza never reached her 21st year, but she lives in these pages in all her complexity, both in the ways she was just like many teenagers and young adults, and in all the ways she was unique. The pain, confusion, and anger created by her death survives in the many people who knew her who are interviewed in the book, and so does her remarkable particularity and the love that many felt and still feel for her. Liliana’s Invincible Summer features a life portrayed by a grieving sister who also happens to be one of the most daring and insightful narrative writers working today.


Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The Beast and Other Tales by Jóusè d'Arbaud

 



Someone on Facebook read The Beast and Other Tales by Jóusè d'Arbaud and enjoyed it and that encouraged me to read it, and thanks to you if that was you (I don’t remember). The first story and longest tale is the main attraction of the book. Still, the three other surprising and moving stories also deal with the inexplicable, the vastness of the universe (even on the most local scale), loneliness, and guilt. They are all set in a place I’d more or less otherwise never heard of: the Camargue Delta, a region where the Rhöne River meets the Mediterranean, a flat delta of shrubs and grass and water and mud south and east of the town of Arles, France.

Written in 1926, “The Beast of Vacarés” is a horror story of sorts, reminiscent to me of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (obviously) and Arthur Machen’s Hill of Dreams (more subtly). It’s a tale with a moody sweep of landscape that features an profoundly odd encounter between an isolated bull herder and something (someone?) that, well, I won’t say any more about. The back cover of the book does say more, and what it says feels both right and wrong in its implications of what the encounter involves. The tale is not going to provide easy answers, or a lot of comfort. Powerful, strange, unforgettable.

If you’re looking for a story to take you to a place far out of the world you recognize, there’s one right here.