Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The intense latest from Mexican writer Melchor (Hurricane Season) follows two teenage boys in the Yucatán united by their disparate longings. The story is mostly that of Polo, who is angry and directionless after failing out of high school and spurned by his criminal older cousin and "almost a brother" Milton after attempting to get work with him. Instead, he serves as gardener in a gated community, where he meets Franco Andrade, a pampered but troubled overweight delinquent occasionally beaten by his father. In the boys' time together, drinking excessive amounts of booze paid for by Franco and secured by Polo, Franco spouts expansively about his lust for new neighbor Señora Marián. Polo is amused by Franco's delusional obsession--which Melchor renders unflinchingly in a pungent anthem of masturbatory fantasies--and disgusted by the Señora, whom he sees as attention-seeking for her lycra pants and cleavage. He's still a boy--he's terrified by the local legend of the Bloody Countess, the ghost of a Spanish colonist who was beaten to death--but wants to be a man and to gain acceptance from Milton, as Franco grows increasingly desperate for the Señora. Their plan, hinted at throughout and revealed only at the end, comes off as wildly absurd and sadly plausible. Once again, this writer impresses and disturbs. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A poor gardener teams up with a disturbed young man to horrifying results in this nightmarish novel. With her second novel to be translated into English, following Hurricane Season (2020), Mexican author Melchor proves that she's got nightmares to spare. This slim volume follows Polo, a gardener in a posh housing development who spends his evenings getting drunk and chain-smoking cigarettes with Franco, the grandson of two of the complex's residents. Polo can't stand Franco, not just because of his family's wealth, but because of his incessant fantasizing about Marián Maroño, another resident of the development and the wealthy wife of a TV personality. Polo only attends their nightly meetings out of boredom and because he can't stand his own home, where he lives with his hectoring mother and a pregnant cousin who won't stop flirting with him. He doesn't get Franco's obsession with Marián, whom he considers "a whore, a gold digger" with an "unbearable family, a bunch of smug pricks who thought the world revolved around them." Polo is so desperate to escape his home that when Franco reveals a plan that will both enrich Polo and realize Franco's most far-fetched sexual fantasies, the young gardener says he'll go along with it, perhaps unaware of how serious his drinking companion is: "Who could have known he really meant what he said?" Like Hurricane Season, this novel is told in long sentences and paragraphs, lending it a fever-dream quality that is, at its most intense, almost sickening. Also like its predecessor, it's filled with harsh profanity, violence, and disturbing sex; even the most open-minded will find it difficult to read in parts. But there's nothing exploitative here--it's horrifying but never gratuitous; Melchor uses shock to lay bare issues of classism, misogyny, and the ravages of child abuse. Her prose, ably translated by Hughes, is dizzying but effective; it's as if she's holding the reader's head and daring them to look away from the social problems she brings to light. This might be a deeply disconcerting novel, but it's also a brave one. A fever dream that's as hard to read as it is brilliant. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.