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Time of the Flies

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Life after crime from the International Booker-shortlisted author of Elena Knows

Fifteen years after killing her husband's lover, Inés is fresh out of prison and trying to put together a new life. Her old friend Manca is out now too, and they've started a business – FFF, or Females, Fumigation, and Flies – dedicated to pest control and private investigation, by women, for women. But Señora Bonar, one of their clients, wants Inés to do more than kill bugs – she wants her expertise, and her criminal past, to help her kill her husband's lover, too. Crimes against women versus crimes by women; culpability, fallibility, and our responsibilities to each other—this is Piñeiro at her wry, earthy best, alive to all the ways we shape ourselves to be understandable, to be understood, by family and love and other hostile forces.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 8, 2024
      This inventive outing from Argentine writer Piñeiro (Elena Knows) infuses a gripping crime plot with feminist theory. After Inés completes a 15-year prison sentence for murdering her now ex-husband’s lover, she opens a business with fellow ex-con and friend Manca, offering fumigation and private investigation services for women in Buenos Aires (its name, FFF, stands for “flies, females, and fumigation”). One year later, a client by the name of Ms. Bonar implores Inés to illegally sell her professional grade poison for her own revenge scheme. When Inés realizes the money would be enough to treat the lump growing in Manca’s breast, she agrees. But Manca doesn’t trust Bonar, and after she discovers Bonar’s ties to Inés’s estranged daughter, Laura, she worries Inés is being set up. Piñeiro cleverly juxtaposes Inés’s ruminations on various species of flies (“the only insects I refuse to touch”) with passages from feminist writers such as Rebecca Solnit (“I just think that if we noticed that women are, on the whole, radically less violent, we might be able to theorise where violence comes from and what we can do about it a lot more productively”). This propulsive novel lays bare the struggles of living under patriarchy.

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  • English

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