"Like Flannery O'Connor and Juan Rulfo, Almada fills her taut, eerie novel with an understanding of rural life, loneliness, temptation and faith."–BBC Culture
"Perhaps most powerful in the book is Almada's focus on detail–she skillfully renders the story of a day in brief chapters that reveal the thoughts and fleeting encounters of characters, who are largely living inside themselves."
–Ploughshares "Almada's nuanced approach leaves room to explore her characters' pasts in some detail, but, crucially, these individuals . . . are not defined by their mistakes."
–Zyzzyva "A dynamic introduction to a major Latin American literary force."
–Shelf Awareness, starred review
"Argentinian fiction writer and poet Almada makes her English-language debut with a slender tale redolent of Flannery O'Connor. . . . [
The Wind That Lays Waste is] fueled by alcohol, religious symbolism, and doubt. . . . The story packs a punch in its portraits of
a man who exalts heaven and another who protests."
–Kirkus Reviews "The drama of this refreshingly unpredictable debut . . . smolders like a lit fuse waiting to touch off its well-orchestrated events. . . . A stimulating, heady story."
–Publishers Weekly "Almada weaves together a quick and tightly told novel. . . . Capturing the soul of rural South America, a place of longstanding truths and pivotal conversions, [
The Wind That Lays Waste] is Almada's debut novel and her first work to be translated into English. She's been billed as a 'promising voice' in Latin American literature, and this tale delivers readily on that promise."
–Booklist "
The Wind That Lays Waste is elegant and stark, a kind of emblem or vision fetched from the far edges of things, arrested and stripped to its essence, as beautiful as it is unnerving. Selva Almada burns off all the dross and gives us pure revelation, cryptic and true."
–Paul Harding, author of Tinkers "
The Wind That Lays Waste is a mesmerizing novel, at once strange and compelling."
–Bonnie Jo Campbell, author of Mothers, Tell Your Daughters