<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Shirley Jackson meets <i>The Virgin Suicides</i>, set at an all-girls orphanage.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>One of the <i>Guardian</i> Best Books of 2017</b></p><p>"Every once in a while a novel does not record reality but creates a whole new reality, one that casts a light on our darkest feelings. Kafka did that. Bruno Schulz did that. Now the Spanish writer Andrés Barba has done it with the terrifying <i>Such Small Hands</i>."--<b>Edmund White</b></p><p>Life changes at the orphanage the day seven-year-old Marina shows up. She is different from the other girls: at once an outcast and object of fascination. As Marina struggles to find her place, she invents a game whose rules are dictated by a haunting violence. Written in hypnotic, lyrical prose, alternating between Marina's perspective and the choral <i>we</i> of the other girls, <i>Such Small Hands</i> evokes the pain of loss and the hunger for acceptance.</p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Barba inhabits the minds of children with an exactitude that seems to me so uncanny as to be almost sinister.--<b>Sarah Perry, the <i>Guardian</i></b></p><p>Barba is intensely alive to the shifting, even Janus-faced nature of strong feeling.--<b><i>San Francisco Chronicle</i></b></p><p><i>Such Small Hands</i> is a magnificently chilling antidote to society's reverence for ideas of infantile innocence and purity.--<b><i>Financial Times</i></b></p><p>Barba's stunning and beautiful prose helps us realize that our adult incomprehension is not absolute.--<b><i>Los Angeles Review of Books</i></b></p><p>Each one of these pages is exquisite, and the end result is a perfectly expressed work that transmits the perverse and bizarre experience that is youth, where games signify life and death and where relationships are teased and pushed to the breaking point.--<b><i>Music & Literature</i></b></p><p>A lyrically rich and devastating portrayal of adolescent struggle.--<b><i>ZYZZYVA</i></b></p><p>A darkly evocative work about young girls, grief, and the unsettling, aching need to belong.&mdas;<b><i>Kirkus Reviews</i> (Starred Review)</b></p><p>Barba explores what the dynamics of an orphanage reveal about any insular community and the trials of its inevitable outcast.--<b>Idra Novey, author of <i>Ways to Disappear</i></b></p><p>Andrés Barba needs no advice. He has already created a world that is perfectly realized and has a craft that is inappropriate for a writer of his age.--<b>Mario Vargas Llosa, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature</b></p><p>In my opinion, Barba has become an essential writer.--<b>Rafael Chirbes, author of <i>On the Edge</i></b></p><p>Andrés Barba is one of several impressive writers from Spain at work on fiction that brilliantly dissects the business of being alive.--<b>Eileen Battersby, <i>The Irish Times</i></b></p><p>An unsettling, tightly controlled book.--<b>Stephen Sparks, Green Apple Books (San Francisco)</b></p><p><i>Such Small Hands</i> is a stick of dynamite. Nothing like having your world rearranged in two sittings.--<b>Mark Haber, Brazos Bookstore (Houston)</b></p><p>I don't think I've ever read such a massively tiny book. A poignant and truly gratifying novel.--<b>Nick Buzanski, Book Culture (New York)</b></p><p>In stunning prose, Andrés Barba probes the fissures that words stitch together long enough to form a scar. Love, hate, trauma--they're tightly coiled in <i>Such Small Hands</i> into that most universal of scars, childhood, and the results, also like childhood, are unsettling.--<b>Brad Johnson, Diesel, A Bookstore (Oakland)</b></p><p>Andrés Barba's magnificent novel will haunt you, and continue to haunt you when you least expect it.--<b>Caitlin Luce Baker, University Book Store (Seattle)</b></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p>Andrés Barba is the one the most lauded contemporary Spanish writers. He is the author of twelve books, including <i>August, October</i> and <i>Rain Over Madrid</i>. In addition to literary fiction, he has written essays, poems, books of photography, and translations of De Quincey and Melville. His books have been translated into ten languages.</p><p>Lisa Dillman translates from Spanish and Catalan and teaches in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Emory University. Some of her recent translations include <i>Signs Preceding the End of the World</i>, by Yuri Herrera, which won the 2016 Best Translated Book Award; <i>Rain Over Madrid</i>, by Andrés Barba; <i>Monastery</i>, co-translated with Daniel Hahn, by Eduardo Halfon; and <i>Salting the Wound</i>, by Víctor del Árbol.</p><p>Edmund White has written biographies of Jean Genet, Marcel Proust, and Arthur Rimbaud. He has also written several novels; the most recent is <i>Our Young Man</i>. He teaches creative writing at Princeton.</p><br>
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