A genre-bending feminist account of the lives and crimes of four women who committed the double transgression of murder, violating not only criminal law but also the invisible laws of gender.
When Women Kill: Four Crimes Retold analyzes four homicides carried out by Chilean women over the course of the twentieth century. Drawing on her training as a lawyer, Alia Trabucco Zeran offers a nuanced close reading of their lives and crimes, foregoing sensationalism in order to dissect how all four were both perpetrators of violent acts and victims of another, more insidious kind of violence. This radical retelling challenges the archetype of the woman murderer and reveals another narrative, one as disturbing and provocative as the transgressions themselves: What makes women lash out against the restraints of gendered domesticity, and how do we--readers, viewers, the media, the art world, the political establishment--treat them when they do?
Expertly intertwining true crime, critical essay, and research diary, International Booker Prize finalist Alia Trabucco Zeran (The Remainder), in a translation by Sophie Hughes, brings an overdue feminist perspective to the study of deviant women.
Show moreA genre-bending feminist account of the lives and crimes of four women who committed the double transgression of murder, violating not only criminal law but also the invisible laws of gender.
When Women Kill: Four Crimes Retold analyzes four homicides carried out by Chilean women over the course of the twentieth century. Drawing on her training as a lawyer, Alia Trabucco Zeran offers a nuanced close reading of their lives and crimes, foregoing sensationalism in order to dissect how all four were both perpetrators of violent acts and victims of another, more insidious kind of violence. This radical retelling challenges the archetype of the woman murderer and reveals another narrative, one as disturbing and provocative as the transgressions themselves: What makes women lash out against the restraints of gendered domesticity, and how do we--readers, viewers, the media, the art world, the political establishment--treat them when they do?
Expertly intertwining true crime, critical essay, and research diary, International Booker Prize finalist Alia Trabucco Zeran (The Remainder), in a translation by Sophie Hughes, brings an overdue feminist perspective to the study of deviant women.
Show moreAlia Trabucco Zerán was born in Chile in 1983. She was
awarded a Fulbright scholarship for a master's in creative writing
in Spanish at New York University, where she wrote her debut novel
La resta (The Remainder). La resta won the prize for Best
Unpublished Literary Work awarded by the Consejo Nacional del Libro
de Chile, and was shortlisted for the Man Booker International in
2019. It has been translated into seven languages. Las homicidas is
her second book. She lives between Santiago and London.
Sophie Hughes is a British translator of Spanish-language
writers such as Alia Trabucco Zerán, Fernanda Melchor and Enrique
Vila-Matas. She has been nominated three times for the
International Booker Prize, as well as for the Dublin Literary
Award, the Valle Inclán Translation Prize, the National Book Award
in Translation, the PEN Translation Prize, the National Translation
Award in Prose, and the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in
Fiction.
Winner of the 2022 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural
Understanding
The New York Times, "New Books in Translation"
The New York Times, "6 New True Crime Books"
The Millions, "Most Anticipated"
Book Riot, "24 Must-Read 2022 Books in Translation""Using court
records, newspaper articles and museum exhibits--which she
punctuates with her own whip-smart diary entries--Trabucco Zerán
reconstructs each crime scene, backdrop and all." --Tina Jordan,
The New York Times
"Trabucco Zerán, well translated by Sophie Hughes, is a moving,
imaginative writer--which is important, given that her four
subjects are 'genuine wrongdoers, proven killers, [and] almost
irredeemable beings.' . . . [When Women Kill] applies a thoughtful
feminist lens to stories as painful as they are gory." --Lily
Meyer, NPR
"A highly original and beautifully written work, which uncovers
uncomfortable truths about a society and its attitudes to female
homicides. This is a timely and important work that invites the
reader to reconsider the relationship between gender and
violence--not just in Chile but globally. Trabucco Zerán has
applied her legal training to the creation of this outstanding
book, reminding us that research takes many forms and is not only
the preserve of the academic world." --Judges' citation, British
Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding
"Throughout, the language is both precise and evocative, and the
author's evaluation of the various circumstances is readable,
trenchant, and intersectional. A formally inventive, lyrical,
feminist analysis of Chile's famous female murderers." --Kirkus,
starred review
"By bringing these unexamined tales to light, the hybrid nature of
When Women Kill is persuasive in its insistence on looking deeper,
echoing the fluctuations in the perceptions of womanhood. . . .
Weaving together multiple literary styles and a wide range of
voices, When Women Kill constantly remolds and blends genres,
culminating in an irresistibly compelling read." --Suhasini Patni,
Asymptote Journal
"Trabucco Zerán's project is not to endorse their crimes, nor to
sensationalize them--she is critical and unsparing in her analysis.
Rather, When Women Kill reveals how narratives and cultural systems
work in the wake of women's crimes." --Morgan Graham, Cleveland
Review of Books
"When Women Kill takes on an ambitious series of goals--to recount
the stories of four killings, to find connections between all of
them, and to show how they relate to a societal progression in
Chile. To her credit, she succeeds--and the resulting work is one
that true crime buffs and fans of cultural history can appreciate
in equal measure." --Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders
"A fascinating must-read for all true crime fans, a book that I
annotated, starred, dogeared, and just generally obsessed over. . .
. Brilliant." --Leah Rachel von Essen, Book Riot "In propulsive
prose impeccably translated by Sophie Hughes, Trabucco Zerán
recounts each case. . . . Like other great books of crime writing,
When Women Kill is more about society's response to violence than
the violence itself. Trabucco Zerán doesn't excuse her killer
women, nor does she condemn them. Instead, she explores how, in a
sexist society, the reaction to their crimes is all too
predictable." --Henry Hietala, Rain Taxi Review "A vital and
beautifully written book. . . . Equal parts essay, detective story,
diary, and feminist discourse, its most moving and brilliant moment
may be when Trabucco Zerán dramatizes the only case not yet
depicted in art: the portrait of a new Medea, tragic and
unsettling, but more than that, transgressive, hungry for another
life." --Giuseppe Caputo "An outstanding work of archival research.
Trabucco Zerán incorporates her diary into her investigation. A
smart, rigorous, and necessary book." --Liliana Colanzi, El País
"This essay turns a stark gaze upon the condition of women in Chile
in the last century." --Nona Fernández "When Women Kill is a
magnificent work of creative nonfiction: provocative, intelligent,
and moving. In it, Alia Trabucco Zerán makes use of her talents as
a writer and researcher to reconstruct the complex stories of four
women accused of violent crimes in the twentieth century. The
result is a masterful and pertinent account full of humanity and
emotion." --Fernanda Melchor "This brilliant essay paints a cogent
and unsparing portrait of the rhetorical operations of the
patriarchy." --Lina Meruane Praise for The Remainder:
Kirkus Best Fiction of 2019
Kirkus Best Fiction in Translation of 2019
Shortlisted for the 2019 Man Booker International Prize
Vanity Fair, "Best Books of 2019"
Entropy, "Best of 2019"
"A lyrical evocation of Chile's lost generation, trying ever more
desperately to escape their parents' political shadow."--Man Booker
International Judges
"This novel is vividly rooted in Chile, yet the quests at its
heart--to witness and survive suffering, to put an intractable past
to rest--are universally resonant." --Publishers Weekly
"A centrifugal story of death, history, and mathematics . . . a
debut that leaves the reader wanting more." --Kirkus
"You could call The Remainder a literary kaleidoscope: look at it
one way and you see how the past lays a crippling hand on the
generation that follows political catastrophe; shift the focus and
you're plunged into a darkly comic road trip with a hungover trio
in an empty hearse chasing a lost coffin across the Andes
cordillera." --The Spectator
"While writers such as Pedro Lemebel and José Donoso have explored
the regime's impact on those who lived through it, Zerán is
concerned with the next generation. Felipe, Iquela and Paloma are
the children of ex-militants, attempting to "unremember" the past
in Chile's haunted capital, Santiago." --TIME
"The second-generation trauma narrative gets a Chilean spin in
Zerán's intense novel of interior monologues, which is Faulknerian
in themes, structure, and style." --Vulture
"A mesmerizing, roaming look at intergenerational trauma, told in a
specific and surreal style that shimmers and shifts on the page and
in the mind." --Nylon
"Truly stunning, full of deft turns of phrase. . . . shines
especially bright when unwinding Felipe's melodic monologues."
--Los Angeles Times
"Deeply compelling." --The Guardian
"A haunted novel, awash with sinister and elegiac moods. It stands
as a testament to the way the past can unsettle us." --Star
Tribune
"Neither the characters nor the narrative ever deal directly with
the historic events themselves, but rather with the fallout - the
photographs, vocabulary, places and people left behind as remnants.
Zerán seamlessly alternates between the voices of Iquela and
Felipe, highlighting the opposing and gendered ways they have
reacted to the circumstances of their childhood." --The Times
Literary Supplement
"The Remainder controls a remarkable range of registers (it is, by
turns, lyrical, elegiac, sensual, funny, tragic). The author, like
her characters, is obsessed with words, those 'cracks in language'
that house our particular ways of understanding things. This novel
is sure to endure." --Edmundo Paz Soldán
"A powerful, impressive novel, dotted with scenes that are as
unique as they are unforgettable." --Lina Meruane
"A fundamental book about what it means to mourn the past, about
the remainders of a history that refuses to be forgotten. This is
the debut we all wish we had written. A spirited, brave, urgent
book, capable of weaving the political and the poetic." --Carlos
Fonseca
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