![]() ![]() Though Amanda gradually gains the power to tell her story in her own way-despite David’s frequent protestations that she's dwelling on irrelevant details that won’t help her understand her circumstances-the impotence and inchoate dangers that underscore the conversation in the clinic ricochet throughout the larger story being told, of what brought her there and why David is with her. At David’s ever more insistent prompting, Amanda recounts a series of events from the apparently recent past, but as he pushes her to recall whatever trauma has landed her in her terminal state, a struggle for narrative control ensues. Schweblin’s English-language debut, translated by the eminently capable McDowell, plays out as a tense, sustained dialogue in an emergency clinic somewhere in the Argentinian countryside between a dying woman named Amanda and her dispassionate interlocutor, David, who, we quickly ascertain, is a child but seems to be neither her child nor any clear relation to her. ![]() ![]() A taut, exquisite page-turner vibrating with existential distress and cumulative dread. ![]()
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