Seeing Red

Seeing Red

by Lina Meruane (Author)

Synopsis

'A scorching examination of how being utterly dependent on someone - even someone you love - can make you a monster' Literary Hub, 13 Translated Books by Women You Need to Read

Lucina, a young Chilean writer, has moved to New York to pursue an academic career. While at a party one night, something that her doctors had long warned might happen finally occurs: her eyes haemorrhage. Within minutes, blood floods her vision, reducing her sight to sketched outlines and tones of grey, rendering her all but blind. As she begins to adjust to a very different life, those who love her begin to adjust to a very different woman - one who is angry, raw, funny, sinister, sexual and dizzyingly alive.

$29.46

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 176
Publisher: Atlantic Books
Published: 03 Aug 2017

ISBN 10: 1786493136
ISBN 13: 9781786493132

Media Reviews
Seeing Red is outstanding; complex yet graceful, gnarly yet beautiful. The best book I've read this year. -- Sara Baume * Author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither *
Astonishing... Burns with vigour and urgency * Los Angeles Times *
Viscous, repulsive, and beautiful * New Yorker *
Stunning... Black and bitter and bloody and beautiful * The Nation *
Meruane is one of the one or two greats in the new generation of Chilean writers who promise to have it all * Roberto Bolano *
A novel of genius and disturbing intelligence * Enrique Vila-Matas *
What I really admired in Seeing Red is Meruane's equal commitment to strong, spare prose and the moral messiness of suffering and loss in a place of safety. She refuses to make a neat or easy story, stays true to the uncomfortably arbitrary nature of sickness and sorrow, denies her narrator and therefore her reader the comforts of heroism while insisting on the redemptive possibilities of literary form. -- Sarah Moss * Author of 'The Tidal Zone' *
Author Bio

Lina Meruane is one of the most prominent and influential female voices in Chilean contemporary literature. She received her PhD in Latin American Literature from New York University, where she currently serves as professor of World and Latin American Literature and Creative Writing.

Megan McDowell's translations have been published in The New Yorker, Tin House, The Paris Review, Harper's, McSweeney's, Words Without Borders, and Vice, among others.