Death Takes Me, Cristina Rivera Garza
Death Takes Me, Cristina Rivera Garza
List: $22.00 | Sale: $14.96
Club: $11.00

Death Takes Me

Author: Cristina Rivera Garza, Robin Myers, Sarah Booker

Narrator: Tony Chiroldes, Lee Osorio, Ines del Castillo, Fabiola Stevenson, Carlotta Brentan, Mark Sanderlin, Victoria Villarreal

Unabridged: 8 hr 8 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/25/2025


Synopsis

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Liliana's Invincible Summer, a dreamlike, genre-defying novel about a professor and detective seeking justice in a world suffused with gendered violence.

“Deeply rewarding . . . a dreamscape with a powerful undertow . . . [a] harrowing and labyrinthine masterpiece.”—Katie Kitamura, The New York Times (Editors’ Choice)

A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF THE YEAR: The New York Times, Esquire, Ms. Magazine, Lit Hub, The AV Club

A city is always a cemetery.

A professor named Cristina Rivera Garza stumbles upon the corpse of a mutilated man in a dark alley and reports it to the police. When shown a crime scene photo, she finds a stark warning written in tiny print with coral nail polish on the brick wall beside the body: “Beware of me, my love / beware of the silent woman in the desert.”

The professor becomes the first informant on the case, which is led by a detective newly obsessed with poetry and trailed by a long list of failures. But what has the professor really seen? As the bodies of more castrated men are found alongside lines of verse, the detective tries to decipher the meaning of the poems to put a stop to the violence spreading throughout the city.

Originally written in Spanish, where the word “victim” is always feminine, Death Takes Me is a thrilling masterpiece of literary fiction that flips the traditional crime narrative of gendered violence on its head. As sharp as the cuts on the bodies of the victims, it unfolds with the charged logic of a dream, moving from the police station to the professor’s classroom and through the slippery worlds of Latin American poetry and art in an imaginative exploration of the unstable terrains of desire and sexuality.

About Cristina Rivera Garza

Cristina Rivera Garza is an award-winning author, translator, and critic. Her books, originally written in Spanish, have been translated into multiple languages. She has won the Roger Caillois Award for Latin American Literature, the Anna Seghers-Preis, and the International Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize. In 2020, she was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Grant. She received her PhD in 2012 in Latin American history from the University of Houston, where she teaches.


Reviews

Goodreads review by emma on March 21, 2025

this is very stylized fiction with a protagonist that has the author's name and chapters randomly in verse or footnotes and several astonishingly literary sex scenes. i'm telling you these things because they really paint a picture i wish i was aware of going in. (review to come / thanks to the publis......more

Goodreads review by Luz on November 08, 2013

La muerte me da: Esta es una propuesta literaria que rompe esquemas establecidos: transgrede, descuartiza (el lenguaje, el texto, los personajes) (literalmente). Esquizofrénica. Un pene. No es para tanto. Un pene sólo es un pene. ¿Habrá más castrados? ¿Quizá el número cinco nos ayude a descubrir al......more

Goodreads review by Jonathan on January 17, 2025

4.5 rounded up “It’s true, death takes me in the throes of sex” . “I want my misery to be translated into the utmost possible beauty” -Both Alejandra Pizarnik . Flora Alejandra Pizarnik has been one of, if not my favorite, poet since I first discovered her some eight years ago, her collection “Extracting......more

Goodreads review by Ose on April 09, 2020

Meh Ahora entiendo porqué tardé tanto en leerlo. Me encanta la manera de escribir de Cristina, pero este libro es tedioso, muy tedioso, además de repetitivo. También creo que, al final, no supo aprovechar el elemento de Pizarnik e, igualmente, todo el asunto de los asesinados, víctimas y castrados fu......more


Quotes

Praise for Death Takes Me

“[A] deeply rewarding experience . . . dense and elliptical, a dreamscape with a powerful undertow . . . Rivera Garza does not follow the conventions of the mystery narrative, the narrowing of a multitude of names to one. Instead, the novel [grows] increasingly expansive as the strictures around identity grow looser and looser, encompassing more and more. In this harrowing and labyrinthine masterpiece, Rivera Garza ultimately goes one step further, unsettlingly implicating readers themselves.”—Katie Kitamura, The New York Times

Death Takes Me puts a subversive twist on the traditional serial killer story.”Time, “Most Anticipated Books of 2025”

“Cristina Rivera Garza’s writing rewires your brain, summoning the ghosts of vivid emotions you’d forgotten you could even feel.”Esquire

“A brilliant and bewildering novel about murder, castration, and the illegibility of poetry . . . underscores the Mexican novelist’s intellectual depth as well as her formal playfulness, and confronts the way an environment rife with violence can shock citizens into numbness . . . It may well be that the novel’s most important contribution to our moment is that it consciously rejects the language of witnessing, elegy, and moral certainty on display in many contemporary stories about trauma. Death Takes Me, instead, suggests that personal grief and political anger can find expression, too, through ambiguity and irony—and even laughter.”—Nicolás Medina Mora, The Atlantic

“[An] unforgettable literary puzzle . . . seamlessly conveyed in Rivera Garza’s incisive and poetic style. Life and literature become one in this singular achievement.”Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Rivera Garza's nonlinear novel of violence and literature, written in elegiac, incandescent prose, reverses the horror of the victims of femicide along the U.S.-Mexico border with taunting murders of men in the city, a pointed turnabout.”Booklist


Praise for Cristina Rivera Garza

“Cristina Rivera Garza is a writer of startling luminosity.”—Idra Novey, author of Those Who Knew

“One of the most fiercely original literary voices from Latin America.”—Ignacio M. Saìnchez Prado, Los Angeles Review of Books

“Cristina Rivera Garza is an explosive writer yet to be fully accounted for in English. She is an insubordinate stylist, a skilled creator of atmospheric and haunting language.”—Lina Meruane, author of Seeing Red

“To read Rivera Garza’s work is to experience a visceral relationship with the written word.”—Sightlines

“Cristina Rivera Garza does not respect what is expected of a writer, of a novel, of language. She is an agitator.”—Yuri Herrera, author of Kingdom Cons