The Pulitzer Prize-winning author talks about her new novel, a genre-defying story about a character with her name. In conversation with the chief executive of the Booker Prize Foundation, she discusses flipping the traditional crime narrative of gendered violence on its head, playing with language, and poetry and art.
Death Takes Me sees a Professor Cristina Rivera Garza stumble upon the corpse of a mutilated man in a dark alley and report it to the police. She becomes the first informant on the case, which is led by a detective newly obsessed with poetry and trailed by a long list of failures. As the bodies of more castrated men are found alongside lines of verse, the detective tries to decipher the meaning of the poems to put a stop to the violence spreading throughout the city.
Rivera Garza is the award-winning author of The Taiga Syndrome and The Iliac Crest, among many others. She won the Pulitzer Prize for her memoir Liliana’s Invincible Summer.