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THE VOICE OF BLOOD by Gabriela Rábago Palafox is a groundbreaking collection of short stories that intertwines themes of identity, desire, trauma, and transformation with a haunting gothic sensibility. The stories explore deeply personal and globally resonant themes, including gender-based violence, ecological precarity, social taboos, and marginalized identities. A pioneer in using literary horror to confront contemporary political and environmental crises, Rábago Palafox reimagines gothic traditions through a feminist lens-the vampire shows women as empowered rather than victimized. Her…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
THE VOICE OF BLOOD by Gabriela Rábago Palafox is a groundbreaking collection of short stories that intertwines themes of identity, desire, trauma, and transformation with a haunting gothic sensibility. The stories explore deeply personal and globally resonant themes, including gender-based violence, ecological precarity, social taboos, and marginalized identities. A pioneer in using literary horror to confront contemporary political and environmental crises, Rábago Palafox reimagines gothic traditions through a feminist lens-the vampire shows women as empowered rather than victimized. Her stories deftly balance the speculative, queer, and deeply human, offering readers a chilling yet thought-provoking exploration of societal anxieties, identity, and memory.
Autorenporträt
Gabriela Rábago Palafox (1948-1995) is best known as an award-winning author, poet, and playwright in her native Mexico, where she also worked as journalist, translator, and cultural activist. Her literary achievements included the 1977 Juan de la Cabada National Children's Story Prize for "Relatos de la ciudad sin dueño" (Stories of a city with no owner), the 1979 Clementina Otero de Barrios Award for her play "Godofrina," a Fellowship from the Centro Mexicano de Escritores (Center for Mexican Writers), and the 1988 Puebla Fantasy and Science Fiction Short-Story Award for "Pandemia" (Pandemic), the first awarded to a woman. She also won the 1989 National Literary Award for "La voz de la sangre" (The Voice of Blood) and the Mexican award for Best Crime Novel for "Los cazadores" (The hunters) in 1994. Her pioneering use of horror, speculative elements, and queer narratives positions her as a precursor to the new wave of Latin American women writers who have revitalized the genre of literary horror to confront contemporary political and environmental crises. Contemporary Mexican writer Gabriela Damián Miravete has highlighted Rábago Palafox's importance by stating that if she had not met with an untimely death in 1995, she would have likely become one of the most important voices of Mexican speculative fiction.