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4.0 

The Delivery

By Margarita García Robayo & Megan McDowell
The Delivery by Margarita García Robayo & Megan McDowell digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

From the acclaimed author ofFish Soup, a wickedly self-aware novel of family, memory, and possibility just this side of the uncanny.

A tolerable, ordinary life: an adequate, if boring, freelance job; reliably irritating video calls with your sister; half-hearted plans for the future (a writing residency, a child); and, in the middle of your half-furnished apartment, an enormous crate. Unopened, delivered days ago, and getting in the way.

InThe Delivery , what’s inside is your estranged mother, and her arrival brings to a head the tentative motions you’ve made to examine the past and the subtle fissures in the life you’ve built. Semi-ordinary happenings take on an otherworldly cast when you look at them sideways, but nothing is stranger, in this place far from home, than the tenuous bonds of family that hold us together, or don’t.

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18 Reviews

4.0
Thinking Face“I was legit confused about the storyline T—T but there were plenty of lines that I've liked and relatable so...”
“Captivating writing with a questionable storyline. Not sure that I ever got what I was waiting for, but there were lots of lines to highlight so I feel satisfied!”
“'Maybe growing up means learning to turn all that irritation into tenderess.' --- I see myself as a supporting actress who's turned thirty and still hasn't had a meaningful role, so she fights her insecurity by announcing she has read philosophers.”
“"It doesn't matter how many years you spend in a place, doesn't matter how much your accent has adapted, or your vocabulary: if you don't understand the jokes then, you don't speak the language, you don't get the code, you don't belong."”

About Margarita García Robayo

Margarita García Robayo was born in 1980 in Cartagena, Colombia, and now lives in Buenos Aires where she teaches creative writing and works as a journalist and scriptwriter. She is the author of several novels, including Hasta que pase un huracán (Waiting for a Hurricane ) and Educación Sexual (Sexual Education , both included in Fish Soup ), Holiday Heart, and Lo que no aprendí (The Things I have Not Learnt). She is also the author of a book of autobiographical essays Primera Persona (First Person, forthcoming with Charco Press) and several collections of short stories, including Worse Things , which obtained the prestigious Casa de las Américas Prize in 2014 (also included in Fish Soup ). TheDelivery is her third book to appear in English after the very successful Fish Soup (selected by the TLS as one of the best fiction titles of 2018) and Holiday Heart (Winner of the English PEN Award).

Megan McDowell

Megan McDowell is a literary translator focusing on contemporary Latin American authors. Her translations include works by Alejandro Zambra, Samanta Schweblin, Mariana Enriquez, Lina Meruane, and Diego Zuñiga. Her short story translations have appeared in The New Yorker , The Paris Review , Tin House , McSweeney’s , Granta , and the Virginia Quarterly Review , among others. Her translation of Alejandro Zambra’s Ways of Going Home won an English PEN Translates award (2013), and her English version of Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin was shortlisted for the 2017 Man Booker International Prize. She has been awarded residencies by the Banff International Translation Centre (Canada), Looren Translation House (Switzerland) and Art Omi (USA). She currently lives in Santiago, Chile.

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