Margarita García Robayo combines existences, spaces, and times because "one can fill the void with stories, and the stories with more voids, and those voids with more stories: life is a story that contains another and another. One is not condemned to a sin
The grown-ups all think she’s going to die soon ― she can see it in their eyes. Still, when twelve-year-old Stina is sent to be treated at Raspberry Hill Sanatorium, she can’t believe her luck.
A series of chronicles written and illustrated by Melina Alzogaray reflecting on her trip through Thailand, Myanmar and Turkey in this beautifully printed book published by Fruto de Dragon, Argentina.
This gripping thriller, which won the 55th City of Barbastro International Novel Prize, revolves around one of the key issues of our time: the interference of artificial intelligence in our existence.
LEGEND SAYS... that when the Qom people arrived on the banks of the Bermejo River, it was always summer. The Qom were happy: they danced and always thanked the Spirit of Good. For the Spirit of Evil, however, there was no singing or dancing.
Miriam Tirado, author of El hilo invisible, brings us a new picture book to help us better understand the bonds that unite us, and to learn to value and care for them.
In a forgotten patch of French countryside, a woman is battling her demons – embracing exclusion yet wanting to belong, craving freedom whilst feeling trapped, yearning for family life but at the same time wanting to burn the entire house down.
A performative essay, an essayistic autofiction, a performance-book in which the author uses her body to explore different ways of living with, and even being, Roland Barthes.
There are seven houses, and they are empty. The narrator, according to Rodrigo Fresán, is "a sane scientist contemplating madmen, or people who are seriously considering going mad."