The Viking is an old boxer who wants to prove to his supervisors in the
police department that he is still very much a tough guy, and so he
participates in the mission of bringing some young suspects to the cells at the
dictator’s Palacio Negro. A maid, María Elena, starts working for the grandson
of her old boss and finds that there is no one on her first day. After asking
the neighbors and taking alarming calls from family members, María Elena
realizes the importance of Albertico and Brita’s
disappearance. She will have to turn to an old acquaintance in the police
department – one who had worked for her old boss and whom she had dated – for
help. Through her innocent inquiries, María Elena is witness to savage arrests
and to fights put up by subversive groups, among whom she fleetingly recognizes
someone familiar. Worry turns to anguish when she needs to ask herself the
whereabouts of her daughter and grandchild. The most action-packed novel by Horacio Castellanos Moya brings together the stories of several characters in
the midst of the most unimaginable barbarity.
Horacio Castellanos
Moya was born in
Praise for the author:
“Horacio Castellanos’
novels leave no one indifferent, and La sirvienta
y el luchador less than any other. The intensity of the prose and the story
told do not give the reader a break.” Rosa
Mora, Babelia
“La sirvienta y el luchador is a fast-paced, sharp-edged, essential novel.” Fernando Castanedo, Babelia
“The author is one of the most solid Latin American
writers, and owns a will of style as powerful as original.” Diego Gándara, La
Razón
“The only writer of my
generation who knows how to narrate the horror, the secret Vietnam,
that was Latin America for a long time.” Roberto Bolaño
“Tirant Memory stands out due to its scrupulous evocation of a conspiracy
atmosphere and its use of historical events.” The London TLS
“A welcome and
eye-opening addition to the new literature of the Latin American nightmare.”
Time
Out New York
“Each novel by Castellanos
Moya confirms the importance of the author, his
narrative art, his incisiveness in describing his country.” Livres Hebdo
“The most committed
and vital writer from Central America.” La Vanguardia
Horacio Castellanos Moya was born in 1957 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. He was brought up in El
Salvador and has lived, since 1979, in different cities throughout America and
Europe. He worked as a journalist in Mexico City for twelve years and lived in
Frankfurt, Germany, as a guest writer of the International Frankfurt Book Fair.
He currently teaches in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and has been invited as a
guest professor at the University of Tokyo. He is the author of eight novels,
six of which have been published by Tusquets, translated into several languages
and critically acclaimed. In 2009 the English translation of his novel Insensatez (Senselessness) received the XXVIII
Northern California Book Award.