Some know Alberto
Laiseca as “the only damned of contemporary Argentinean literature.”
Regardless, his work is already abundant, reason why, after Tusquets Argentina
published La mujer en la muralla, his most mythical novel, most
elaborated and most read, we thought it almost necessary to make it known
around the world.
Unanimously celebrated since its first edition in 1990, La mujer
en la muralla is a parable about Chi’n Hsih Hwang Ti –a fierce
and brilliant emperor– and his colossal creation – the Great Wall of China.
But it is also the multiform and fascinating adventure of the people who
admired and suffered the tyrant. Throughout this book silently march Lai Chú,
the cautious sage, the unfortunate learned men, the sect of idealised eunuchs,
wives, concubines and prostitutes. At the very heart of the story we find the self-sacrificing
Men Chiang Nü, who follows her learned husband –recruited to work in the
inhuman construction of the Great Wall– to the confines of the empire. With the
absurd as one of the most credible elements of reality, and through a
documental rigor worthy of trust, Alberto Laiseca actualises a diverse
and extraordinary world, animating it before the reader not only with quotidian
details, but also with the most meditated and profound vision of the
protagonists.
Alberto Laiseca was born
in Rosario in 1941. He is author of the novels Su turno para morir (Your
Turn to Die), 1976; Aventuras de un novelista atonal (The Adventures of
an Atonal Novelist), 1982; La hija de Kheops (Kheop’s Daughter), El
jardín de las máquinas parlantes (The Garden of the Speaking Machines),
1993; and the monumental saga Los Sorias (The Sorias), published by
Simurg in 1998 and awarded the Boris Vian Prize. He also published a
book of short stories called Matando enanos a garrotazos (Clubbing Midgets
to Death), 1982, a collection of poetry titled Poemas chinos (Chinese
Poems), 1987, and the essay Por favor, ¡plágieme! (Plagiarize me,
Please!), published in 1991. Many of his short stories are included in both
Argentinean and Spanish anthologies. Laiseca received the Guggenheim
Grant in 1991.