A brilliant work of historical excavation with profound echoes in an age redolent with violence and xenophobia
Julián Herbert was born in Acapulco in 1971. He is a writer,
musician, and teacher, and is the author of Tomb Song as well as
several volumes of poetry and two story collections. He lives in
Saltillo, Mexico.
Christina MacSweeney was awarded the 2016 Valle Inclán Translation
Prize for her translations of Valeria Luiselli's The Story of My
Teeth. Her translation of Daniel Saldaña París's novel Among
Strange Victims was shortlisted for the 2017 Best Translated Book
Award.
"The great strength of Herbert's book, written with such shame and fury, is that it is not framed as epitaph but as dispatch from a live crime scene, attentive to the silences, the still seething resentments, relinquishing nothing to history."--The New York Times "A stunning account of the ways in which xenophobia and ignorance fuel violence. . . . With poetic reportage, Herbert conjures the reality of blood in the soil everywhere and the need for vigilance against nationalism."--Literary Hub"[The House of the Pain of Others] is both vivid and enthusiastically researched, examining each piece of available evidence to establish what must have happened at every stage and how it was obscured, then and later."--Harper's "If The House of the Pain of Others is a work of history, then, it's a self-aware one, more crónica than objective report. The narrative is filtered through Herbert's distinct sensibility, one that reveals how stories of the past are actually written--subjectively, provisionally, influenced by the sheer randomness of experience."--Bookforum "Herbert understands rhetoric's power and uses it to expose a century-old atrocity. . . . A century passes. The world turns. Herbert reaches out with history and art, beseeching us to not let these crimes go unheeded."--Paste "The House of the Pain of Others is partially about how the past haunts the present, especially if the root issues go unaddressed. The book is about Mexico, and Torreón, but its lessons are not limited to those localities. Herbert claims that 'this is not the story you were expecting, ' but in many ways it is achingly familiar."--Shelf Awareness "The strengths of Herbert's writing are patent throughout: his vast, comprehensive research; his often elegant phrases and sentences . . .; his empathy; and his determination to be accurate and fair. . . . A grim, complex and admonitory account of a deeply racist episode that many would rather forget--or ignore."--Kirkus Reviews "With exhaustive zeal, Herbert interviews descendants, archivists, officials, and conducts impromptu 'what-do-you-know?' conversations with Torreón cab drivers. He compiles several-century histories of China, the U.S., and Mexico. He investigates Sinophobia across the North American continent. . . . Award-winning translator MacSweeney enables anglophone readers access to Herbert's electrifying testimony."--Booklist"The House of the Pain of Others is a meticulous exploration into the way we learn to hate--and the oblivion we co-create to mask our complicity and shame."--Anna Badkhen
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