Perhaps, death has had its mark on Argentine author Mariana Enriquez's life since birth. Enríquez was born in Buenos Aires in 1973 during a period when Argentina was under military dictatorship. From ...
The author Mariana Enriquez deploys — and enjoys — horror conventions. But in “Our Share of Night,” she reminds readers that the violence we live with can be far more frightening. Mariana Enríquez ...
In "Somebody Is Walking on Your Grave," Mariana Enriquez travels through North and South America, Europe and Australia, visiting Paris's catacombs, Prague's Old Jewish Cemetery, New Orlean's ...
In the 1970s and ‘80s, during Argentina’s so-called “Guerra sucia” — “Dirty War” — a fascist military junta ruled with a bloody fist, executing tens of thousands of citizens. That nation’s writers ...
S.A. Cosby, left, Mariana Enriquez and Michael Connelly are finalists for L.A. Times Book Prizes. (Flatiron Books/Associated Press/Los Angeles Times) The finalists for the 42nd Los Angeles Times Book ...
A stone’s throw from my apartment, Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery is its own dreamscape: 478 acres of parkland laid out in the 19th century, with weathered plots, granite sculptures, mausoleums for ...
The alleys and slums of Buenos Aires supply the backdrop to Enriquez’s harrowing and utterly original collection (after Things We Lost in the Fire), which illuminates the pitch-dark netherworld ...
'Call Me By Your Name' banner RT Features is producing the project, unveiled in Cannes and based on a short story of the same name from Argentina's Mariana Enriquez. By Alex Ritman U.K. Correspondent ...
LONDRESLONDRES — La escritora china Can Xue y el autor keniano Ngugi wa Thiong’o, ambos favoritos perennes al Nobel de Literatura, están entre los nominados al Premio Booker Internacional para ficción ...
International Booker finalist Mariana Enríquez, who specializes in gothic fiction and horror, makes her nonfiction debut with Somebody Is Walking on Your Grave (trans. by Megan McDowell; Hogarth, Sept ...
In the 1970s and ‘80s, during Argentina’s so-called “Guerra sucia” — “Dirty War” — a fascist military junta ruled with a bloody fist, executing tens of thousands of citizens. That nation’s writers ...
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