Named a -Best Book of the Year- by
El Cultural,
El Confidencial,
PlayGround,
Numerocero, and
Estandarte -The book surprises the reader with an explosive opening that combines cunnilingus, the full moon, and menstruation. . . . Disconcerting in the best possible sense.-
-- El Cultural -The singular thing about this novel is . . . the narrative voice.-
-- El Pais -Navarro is one of Spanish literature's most interesting contemporary writers. . . . A Working Woman represents a major leap forward in her work.-
-- PerfilNamed a "Best Book of the Year" by
El Cultural,
El Confidencial,
PlayGround,
Numerocero, and
Estandarte "The book surprises the reader with an explosive opening that combines cunnilingus, the full moon, and menstruation. . . . Disconcerting in the best possible sense."
-- El Cultural "The singular thing about this novel is . . . the narrative voice."
-- El Pais "Navarro is one of Spanish literature's most interesting contemporary writers. . . . A Working Woman represents a major leap forward in her work."
-- PerfilA provocative new novel from the author ranked among Granta's "Best of Young Spanish-Language Novelists" "Written in a unique voice that evokes the alienation Elena feels so deeply, Navarro's novel is a complex yet not overwhelming work that deals as adeptly with relationships between people as it does with the relationship people feel to their cities and their work. . . . The novel is thoroughly gripping."
-- World Literature Today "A novel of economic and psychological precarity and an exploration of the tension between the boundedness of art and the formlessness of life, A Working Woman is as charming as a fable and as frenzied as a fever dream."
-- Literary Hub "Elvira Navarro is an enormously gifted and disturbing young writer with an unusual eye for the bizarre; she captures personal fragility with deceptively detached prose that stays with us like a scarring incision."
-- Lina Meruane, author of Seeing Red "
A Working Woman invents a language and a structure to portray the outskirts of the city and job insecurity like no novel has done before. Elvira Navarro is one of the most intelligent and daring writers in the Spanish-speaking world."
-- Daniel Saldana Paris, author of Among Strange Victims "
A Working Woman . . . interrogates the psyche of characters mired by the Spanish economic crisis and the realities and lies they build around themselves in search of catharsis."
-- Daniel Pena, Ploughshares "The book surprises the reader with an explosive opening that combines cunnilingus, the full moon, and menstruation. . . . Disconcerting in the best possible sense."
-- El Cultural "The singular thing about this novel is . . . the narrative voice."
-- El Pais "Navarro is one of Spanish literature's most interesting contemporary writers. . . . A Working Woman represents a major leap forward in her work."
-- Perfil