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The Simple Art of Killing a Woman

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months

From best-selling Brazilian novelist Patrícia Melo comes a genre-defying tale of women in the Amazon and their reckoning with brutal oppression—by turns poetic, humorous, dark, and inspiring.

The Simple Art of Killing a Woman vividly conjures the epidemic of femicide in Brazil, the power women can hold in the face of overwhelming male violence, the resilience of community despite state-sponsored degradation, and the potential of the jungle to save us all.

To escape her newly aggressive lover, a young lawyer accepts an assignment in the Amazonian border town of Cruzeiro do Sul. There, she meets Carla, a local prosecutor, and Marcos, the son of an indigenous woman, and learns about the rampant attacks on the region's women, which have grown so commonplace that the cases quickly fill her large notebook. What she finds in the jungle is not only persistent racism, patriarchy, and deforestation, but a deep longing for answers to her enigmatic past. Through the ritual use of ayahuasca, she meets a chorus of Icamiabas, warrior women bent on vengeance—and gradually, she recovers the details of her own mother's early death.

The Simple Art of Killing a Woman resists categorization: it is a series of prose poems lamenting the real-life women murdered by so many men in Brazil; a personal search for history, truth, and belonging; and a modern, exacting, and sometimes fantastical take on very old problems that, despite our better selves, dog us the world over.

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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2023
      A Brazilian lawyer bears witness to the flaws in her country's justice system, especially regarding the murder of Indigenous women. The young, unnamed narrator has traveled to a remote Amazonian border town to participate in a research project for her firm, taking notes on the trials of men accused of killing Indigenous women. The trip is well-timed as her lover, Amir, has turned abusive, and she is acutely aware of how abuse escalates; her own mother was killed by her father when she was a child. From a distance, she is more able to contemplate these experiences as part of a larger pattern of abuse and femicide in Brazil. Three wealthy young men are on trial for the gruesome rape and murder of Txupira, a 14-year-old Indigenous girl. The narrator witnesses the defense attorney meeting with three jurors in the middle of the night during the trial, and after this proof of corruption is publicized in the newspapers, the editor dies under suspicious circumstances. A friend introduces her to his mother's Indigenous community, which welcomes her and helps her recall more details of the night her mother died. Each chapter begins with the description of a woman being murdered by a man in her life as part of the research notebook the narrator is assembling, and as the violence continues, she decides to fight back by publishing the stories. Brazilian author Melo weaves together crime, magical realism, mythology, and social criticism in this relevant and urgent translation from the Portuguese by Lewis. Though the subject is horrifying, especially in the details about marred and dismembered victims, the narrator's voice is captivating and compelling, offering strength and purpose rather than despair. A deeply affecting novel illuminating the costs of being a woman in a dangerous, misogynistic society.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      December 22, 2023
      An unnamed S�o Paulo attorney heads to far-flung Acre in western Brazil to document the region's femicides for an initiative to classify the murders as an epidemic. Her colleagues don't know her intimate connection to the work: she is haunted by memories of her father murdering her mother, and was recently assaulted by her ex, Amir. In Acre, she follows the case of Txupira, a 14-year-old Indigenous Ch'aska girl who was kidnapped, raped, and murdered by a trio of local golden boys who are later acquitted. But the protagonist has photographed their defense attorney's secret meeting with jurors, and shares the pictures with Carla, the prosecutor, and Rita, a reporter covering the case. Hounded by increasingly disturbing texts from Amir and the looming menace of the young killers' supporters, she, Carla, and Rita risk their lives to vindicate Txupira and indict the caste system that marginalizes Indigenous Brazilians. Melo's thoughtful first-person narrative and starkly powerful verse interwoven with reports of murdered women fluidly bears the weight of a gripping crime story and fearless social commentary.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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