Agustina Bazterrica

Tender is the Flesh

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'A thrilling dystopia that everyone should read' DAZED'A hideous, bold, unforgettable vision of the future' i-D MAGAZINE'A gut-churning, brilliantly realised novel' DAILY MAIL
If everyone was eating human meat, would you?
Marcos is in the business of slaughtering humans — only no one calls them that. He works with numbers, consignments, processing. One day, he's given a specimen of the finest quality. He leaves her tied up in an outhouse, a problem to be disposed of later.
But she haunts Marcos. Her trembling body, and watchful gaze, seem to understand. And soon, he becomes tortured by what has been lost — and what might still be saved…
This book is currently unavailable
183 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2020
Publication year
2020
Publisher
Pushkin Press
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Impressions

  • Jynxshared an impression4 months ago
    👎Give This a Miss
    💩Utter Crap

    The book was trying too hard to be creepy. which imo makes the book not-scary

  • Duckyuashared an impression7 months ago
    👍Worth reading
    💩Utter Crap
    💀Spooky

    What the actual fuck was that ending I hated every second of it

  • Jᜀᜈ᜔ᜈshared an impression2 years ago
    💀Spooky

    I think I died at the last page

Quotes

  • A- Ortegahas quotedlast month
    He detests being this efficient. But he doesn’t stop answering, resolving problems, trying to find the best option for the plant.
  • A- Ortegahas quotedlast month
    What he would like to do is tell her that “later” means later and that when she insults her employees, she just comes across as a disloyal boss.
  • A- Ortegahas quotedlast month
    She gives him the same speech every time, tells him how difficult it is even in this day and age to be a woman and have a career, says that people continue to hold prejudices against her, that only recently have they started greeting her and not her assistant who’s a man, because they think he’s the one who’s head of the laboratory, it was her choice not to have a family, and socially she has to pay for it, because people continue to think that women have to fulfil some biological plan, when her great accomplishment in life has been to press ahead, to never give in; being a man is so much easier, she says, this is her family—the laboratory—but no one understands, not really, she’s revolutionizing medicine, she tells him, and people continue to care whether her shoes are feminine, or that her roots are showing because she didn’t have time to go to the hairdresser, or that she’s gained weight.

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