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Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego
Editorial Anagrama
Everyday Life Turned Nightmare: The Gateway to Mariana Enriquez's Universe.
In Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego, Mariana Enriquez brings terror into the realm of the everyday. Her stories take place in neighborhoods, houses, families, and recognizable bodies, but something twists from the very first page: a rare emotional vividness turns every scene into a nightmare the reader cannot forget.
This collection features the self-called mujeres ardientes, who respond to extreme machista violence with a brutal form of protest; a student who pulls out her nails and eyelashes while another tries to hold her together; the years of blackouts decreed by the government during which three friends become poisoned and forever linked; the real figure of the child murderer Petiso Orejudo; hikikomori, black magic, jealousy, heartbreak, rural superstitions, and abandoned buildings that seem to breathe.
The protagonists are often social workers, police officers, tour guides, and other figures who interact with marginalized people. Through them, Enriquez explores guilt, compassion, cruelty, the difficulties of living with others, and a deeply believable terror shaped by poverty, gender violence, and social inequality. The result is a dark and political literature that transforms horror into a tool to face head-on what is usually preferred to be unseen.
Considered one of the most powerful narrators in contemporary Argentine literature, Mariana Enriquez plays with elements of crime fiction, dirty realism, reportage, and humor to build a unique, recognizable, and disturbing universe. Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego is the ideal gateway to that world: a perfect book for those seeking horror and mystery with social depth, urban atmosphere, and a voice that makes no concessions.