The Delivery

Author:   Margarita García Robayo ,  Megan McDowell
Publisher:   Charco Press
ISBN:  

9781913867690


Pages:   169
Publication Date:   24 October 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Delivery


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Overview

From the acclaimed author ofFish Soup, a wickedly self-aware novel of family, memory, and possibility just this side of the uncanny. A tolerable, ordinary life: an adequate, if boring, freelance job; reliably irritating video calls with your sister; half-hearted plans for the future (a writing residency, a child); and, in the middle of your half-furnished apartment, an enormous crate. Unopened, delivered days ago, and getting in the way. InThe Delivery , what’s inside is your estranged mother, and her arrival brings to a head the tentative motions you’ve made to examine the past and the subtle fissures in the life you’ve built. Semi-ordinary happenings take on an otherworldly cast when you look at them sideways, but nothing is stranger, in this place far from home, than the tenuous bonds of family that hold us together, or don’t.

Full Product Details

Author:   Margarita García Robayo ,  Megan McDowell
Publisher:   Charco Press
Imprint:   Charco Press
ISBN:  

9781913867690


ISBN 10:   1913867692
Pages:   169
Publication Date:   24 October 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

"""The microscopic precision with which García Robayo delves into the human soul is striking."" —El País ""An unsettling novel about uncertainty, memories and fears, solitude, family relationships and hopes for the future."" —Diario Popular ""García Robayo has written a novel that, avoiding any complacency, situates us in the interstices of identity."" —El Mundo ""If for this narrator having a child is like ‘resisting extinction’ (…), novels like The Delivery fulfil a similar injunction to permanence: not to pass through the world without leaving anything behind."" —El País ""An intimate, mature work that confirms Margarita García Robayo as one of the most promising Latin American writers today."" —La Razón ""The Colombian writer makes the daily routine of her protagonist seem like a disturbing sequence of events."" —Expansión ""A brilliant and exhaustive relationship with language that draws on a search for origins."" —El Tiempo ""Thoughts that achieve a sparking lucidity that contrasts with the bewilderment experienced by the main character."" —La Nación ""You can’t put it down until you find out what happens at the end."" —Pagina/12 ""The Delivery is one of those novels that mark a before and an after, just as happens to its main character when she manages to open the crate sent by her sister."" —Pagina/12 ""A book of contained intensity, full of glimpses more than certainties, which confirms the author as one of the leading voices of Latin American fiction."" —El Siglo de Torreón ********** Praise for Margarita García Robayo Biblioteca de Narrativa Colombiana Prize (Finalist) ""García Robayo writes with caustic insight, brittle humour and a fair whack of cynicism (...) Holiday Heart is brilliant."" —The Guardian ""Understated, lyrical, and delivers its insights by means of acute observation. (5 stars)"" —The Arts Desk ""Cunningly well achieved."" —Irish Times ""Holiday Heart is a poignant and searing story of love ending."" —Gutter Magazine ""Coombe’s translation brilliantly captures the bite in García Robayo’s humour."" —iNews ""One of Colombia’s greatest living writers."" —The Monthly Booking ""Brilliantly dramatises the disjunction between an idealized picture of life like sitting on a sunny beach and the reality of that life like getting sand caught in your teeth."" —Lonesome Reader Best Fiction Books of 2017 —New York Times (Español) ""Darkly funny throughout, this examination of two lives will stay with you long after you read the final words and lay the book down."" —Lunate ""Every sentence in the book seems to be written with a scalpel infused with acid. "" —Morning Star ""Acute, provocative, concise and raw."" —Translating Women ""An incredibly insightful portrayal of a disintegrating marriage...provides a sharp-eyed view of estrangement and personal identity."" —Book Riot ""Frightening, alluring, and inescapable."" —Books and Bao ********** Casa de las Américas Prize (Winner) Society of Authors Valle-Inclán Prize (Shortlist) ""García Robayo’s prose bristles with restrained energy and a wry humour which captures the disaffection of her characters."" —The Times Literary Supplement ""[Fish Soup] is a gorgeous, blackly humorous look into the lives of Colombians struggling to find their place in society, both at home and abroad."" —Publishers Weekly, starred review ""A remarkable genre-bending effort."" —The Guardian ""The tackiness of the Caribbean coast and its discontents are marvellously rendered."" —The Times Literary Supplement ""If you’re a fan of Ottessa Moshfegh or Melissa Broder, then this is for you."" —The Guardian ""An evocative collection that conveys the potency of desire in even the most ordinary lives."" —Kirkus ""García Robayo is building one of the most solid and interesting oeuvres in Latin American literature."""" —Juan Cárdenas , author of ORNAMENTAL ""Her stories combine the atmosphere of Desperate Housewives, Hemingway’s iceberg theory and a memorable, bittersweet ending."""" —Jorge Carrión , author of BOOKSHOPS ""Margarita shows sharp insight into contemporary life. Her voice speaks with surreptitious irony and sophisticated psychological perception. She is the creator of an exceptional poetics of displacement."""" —Juan Villoro , author of THE WITNESS ""There are very few writers who can challenge expectations the way Margarita García Robayo does. Margarita is simply one of the best of the new generation that respects, yet no longer identifies with, the Latin American Boom."""" —Mariana Enríquez , author of THINGS WE LOST IN THE FIRE ""This is a text written from within the belly of the beast. (…) One of the most essential books of the year."" —Asymptote ""García Robayo’s prose is concise and startling, her voice versatile and capable of packing a serious punch."" —LA Review of Books ""One of the most potent figures of contemporary Latin American literature."" —ABC Cultural ""Full of everyday details that reveal the most vulnerable aspects of feminine subjectivity."" —La Nación **********"


Author Information

Margarita García Robayo was born in 1980 in Cartagena, Colombia, and now lives in Buenos Aires where she teaches creative writing and works as a journalist and scriptwriter. She is the author of several novels, including Hasta que pase un huracán (Waiting for a Hurricane ) and Educación Sexual (Sexual Education , both included in Fish Soup ), Holiday Heart, and Lo que no aprendí (The Things I have Not Learnt). She is also the author of a book of autobiographical essays Primera Persona (First Person, forthcoming with Charco Press) and several collections of short stories, including Worse Things , which obtained the prestigious Casa de las Américas Prize in 2014 (also included in Fish Soup ). TheDelivery is her third book to appear in English after the very successful Fish Soup (selected by the TLS as one of the best fiction titles of 2018) and Holiday Heart (Winner of the English PEN Award). Megan McDowell is a literary translator focusing on contemporary Latin American authors. Her translations include works by Alejandro Zambra, Samanta Schweblin, Mariana Enriquez, Lina Meruane, and Diego Zuñiga. Her short story translations have appeared in The New Yorker , The Paris Review , Tin House , McSweeney’s , Granta , and the Virginia Quarterly Review , among others. Her translation of Alejandro Zambra’s Ways of Going Home won an English PEN Translates award (2013), and her English version of Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin was shortlisted for the 2017 Man Booker International Prize. She has been awarded residencies by the Banff International Translation Centre (Canada), Looren Translation House (Switzerland) and Art Omi (USA). She currently lives in Santiago, Chile.

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