Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Comemadre
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
11 posts | 9 read | 1 reading | 19 to read
In the outskirts of Buenos Aires in 1907, a doctor becomes involved in a misguided experiment that investigates the threshold between life and death. One hundred years later, a celebrated artist goes to extremes in search of aesthetic transformation, turning himself into an art object. How far are we willing to go, Larraquy asks, in pursuit of transcendence? The world of Comemadre is full of vulgarity, excess, and discomfort: strange ants that form almost perfect circles, missing body parts, obsessive love affairs, and man-eating plants. Darkly funny, smart, and engrossing, here the monstrous is not alien, but the consquence of our relentless pursuit of collective and personal progress.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
rachelsbrittain
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image
Panpan

I enjoy reading translated books but this one fell short for me. The premise of a psychiatric facility in early 1900s Argentina decapitating patients to see what they say in the moments between decapitation and death was really interesting to me but it just didn't explore it in a way I found at all satisfying.

quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy

"The child prodigy is a repulsive creature. It can be measured according to the degree of its anomaly, the fence around its isolation: its so-called talent."

quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy

"I shoot Mr. Allomby a conspiratorial glance. We‘re not actually conspiring, but it‘s important to look at people like that every now and then because that‘s how real relationships are forged."

batsy I love this. And so true! 4y
2 likes1 comment
quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy

"The sweat from our necks trickles down to our asses; if it weren‘t for our underwear, it would continue all the way down to our feet and gradually form a puddle big enough to swim in."

quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy

"Papini doesn‘t have a scientific face. He has freckles. No diploma in the world can make freckles disappear."

quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image

quote
Bertha_Mason
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy

"He is sweating, exopthalmic, and smells like lemon. This indicates that he is happy, or believes that he is happy."

review
Billypar
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image
Pickpick

This strange gem begins in a Buenos Aires asylum in 1907 where a bunch of the doctors are creeping on the head nurse as a series of horrific experiments are undertaken to probe the boundaries of life and death. Not weird enough? Then we flash forward a hundred years to glimpse the life of an artist obsessed with integrating the human body and its various parts into shocking exhibitions. Dark and funny, with a sharp wit underlying the strangeness.

Billypar Photo is from an event at the Community Bookstore in Brooklyn. The author and translator were asking questions of each other, a format I haven't seen before but really enjoyed. 5y
Liz_M I like their shelves by publisher 5y
Billypar @Liz_M Definitely- I actually picked up 'The Other' from their considerable NYRB collection. 5y
33 likes3 comments
blurb
Billypar
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image

#brooklynbookfestival #bookhaul
I've always been resolving to try out small presses, so I'm really excited about this haul. Two of these were on my radar- Vesaas' The Birds from Archipelago (and put on my radar by praise from @BarbaraBB ) and Apostol's Insurrecto from Soho. Also picked up Kincaid's Party: A Mystery (Akashic) for my 2-year-old niece, and Larraquy's Comemadre (Coffee House Press), which I am trying to resist reading immediately.

Liz_M I love Archipelago's books. The square size, the covers, the nice paper. 5y
Billypar @Liz_M Agreed- this was my first experience with them- gorgeous books. And great to browse translated literature without needing to look for a specific title or author. The only other place I've done that is McNally Jackson's shelves by country. 5y
Tanisha_A I have never heard of these. Wow! 👏 5y
See All 6 Comments
batsy Nice haul! All three of these are on my TBR. And I'm sure you'll get to them before I do so I look forward to your thoughts 😆 5y
Billypar @Tanisha_A I hope they're as good as I'm expecting! 🤞 5y
Billypar @batsy Larraquy is giving a reading in NYC on 10/4, so I may expedite that one and read beforehand (it's pretty short too). Insurrecto sounds like a challenge though, so that may take longer (I seem to keep buying these difficult books, so there's a bit of a TBR queue for those 😬). 5y
41 likes6 comments
review
overtheedge
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image
Pickpick

Oh My God! This is one of the sickest, creepiest absurd stories I have ever read, dark, funny and I loved it! Set in Argentina in a sanitarium in 1907, where they are doing experiments using cancer patients....bizarre,macabre that just gets more extreme as you read. This story of image, identity, medical testing and deformities takes a look at the field of psychiatry through the back door.
Excellent. Unforgettable and not for the faint of heart.

vivastory I haven't read this, but it sounds somewhat similar to another book I loved 6y
mreads @overtheedge @vivastory both sound great, definitely adding to my TBR 👍 6y
41 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
Liberty
Comemadre | Roque Larraquy
post image

Morning reading: Someone on Goodreads referred to this as “gothic Dana Spiotta” and I nearly fell out of my seat with joy. 👁❤️📚

HeidiReads The cover is so pretty! 6y
Baawrabookster The cover looks very interesting ☺️✌️🦄 6y
120 likes9 stack adds2 comments