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Death as a side effect (2010)

di Ana Maria Shua

Altri autori: Vedi la sezione altri autori.

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
253918,384 (4.1)6
In Death as a Side Effect, Ana María Shua's brilliantly dark satire transports readers to a dystopic future Argentina where gangs of ad hoc marauders and professional thieves roam the streets while the wealthy purchase security behind fortified concrete walls and the elderly cower in their apartments in fear of being whisked off to state-mandated "convalescent" homes, never to return. Abandoned by his mistress, suffocated by his father, and estranged from his demented mother and ineffectual sister, Ernesto seeks his vanished lover. Hoping to save his dying father from the ministrations of a diabolical health-care system, he discovers that, ultimately, everyone is a patient, and the instruments wielded by the impersonal medical corps cut to the very heart of the social fabric.   The world of this novel, with its closed districts, unsafe travel, ubiquitous security cameras, and widespread artificiality and uncertainty, is as familiar as it is strange--and as instructive, in its harrowing way, as it is deeply entertaining. The Spanish edition has been selected by the Congreso de la Lengua Española as one of the one hundred best Latin American novels published in the last twenty-five years.… (altro)
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Un hijo, su padre y una mujer infiel. Una historia de amor y tragedia en un Buenos Aires futuro, cercano y peligrosamente real.
  Natt90 | Jan 13, 2023 |
This book is set in a vaguely futuristic Argentina, where the gap between the rich and the poor is larger than ever, the police are useless so private security systems deal with crime and protecting the public and companies, and old people are required to enter retirement homes which never want to let them go. Shua handles this nicely by focusing on the main character and his problems. Ernesto is writing to his former lover, who abandoned him for another man, even though he knows she’ll never read his words. The prose flows very well even when describing horrible and violent scenes. Ernesto describes his unhappy but not miserable life and eventually starts to focus on his father’s illness, surgery and confinement in the Convalescent Home.

Initially, Ernesto is working as a scriptwriter for a vastly wealthy, capricious, feckless director though his real job is as a makeup artist. He has a short-lived and dispassionate affair with his father’s nurse and also befriends a neighbor who is violently attacked. Eventually, his worries about his parents dominate his life - his mother has a case of advanced dementia and his father, after a surgery, is also confined in a Home. Ernesto’s father is a raging monster but the author is able to create a temporarily sympathetic portrait of him in the Home. Patients go into Homes but never come out and Ernesto starts to think that maybe he’ll have to do something desperate to get his father out. His plans don’t turn out the way anyone might expect. Besides the skillfully smooth writing, the book also creates an interesting portrait of an all-too-realistic dystopia. ( )
4 vota DieFledermaus | Jun 23, 2013 |
Dystopian literature stems from no particular geographic boundaries. Aldous Huxley and George Orwell were British, Margaret Atwood is Canadian, Philip K. Dick and Kurt Vonnegut were American. Thus, while Ana María Shua sets Death as a Side Effect in her native Argentina, the conditions that beset that future society are perhaps universally possible.

Survival is one of the underlying themes here, both personal and economic. The rich live in gated neighborhoods with 24-hour surveillance and security guards. The average person lives in "no-man's-land," avoiding the "occupied zones" controlled by criminals and dangerous thugs. Marauding gangs make the streets of Buenos Aires so unsafe the average person takes armored taxis to get around town and to go to protected areas for walks. Thus, when "vandals" break into the apartment below him, Ernesto Kollady's reaction is ingrained:

When I heard the banging and explosions, I did what we all do: I made sure the security features in my apartment were working. I played music full blast so I wouldn't hear the screams. I locked myself in the bathroom and turned on the shower.


Ernesto, like others, must deal with life in a society where life seems cheapened. Paparazzi with video cameras crowd around hospitals hoping to get footage of someone dying. The Suicide Channel is one of television's more popular offerings. Only the poor go to hospitals, where, to ensure a profit, the "franchise owners" require patients' families to provide the food. Both physicians and families, meanwhile, are required to report the declining health of older people so they can report to "convalescent homes," paid for by selling what property the individual has. As a result, older and ill people pay doctors under the table to be their "secret" physician because an "official" physician would be required to report them.

Yet while Death as a Side Effect has abundant social commentary, Shua does far more with the narrative. At bottom, the dystopia she envisions is essentially a stage upon which a larger and more common literary theme plays out -- human relationships. Told in the form of Ernesto writing to the mistress who abandoned him, this slim narrative examines family relations, particularly that between Ernesto and his father. Although impacted by this society's mandates, particularly the convalescent homes, the family issues here are not necessarily unique. Ernesto is a seemingly ineffectual everyman. His father on the other hand is a powerful, controlling figure who seems to have always found joy in humiliating Ernesto. Yet Ernesto has a somewhat kinder view of his father than his sister, who never really had a life outside the family home and in whom a searing hatred has grown. Their mother, meanwhile, has descended into Alzheimer's-type dementia.

When a large intestinal tumor forces Ernesto's father first into a hospital and then a convalescent home, his mother's dementia and his sister's enmity leave Ernesto responsible for his father's fate. Thus, although Ernesto's own children are no more than passing references in his writing, he is required to come to grips with the archetypal father-son conflict. Despite his father's long history of demeaning him, Ernesto also confronts the preservation of personal dignity in a society seemingly devoid of the concept.

Originally published in 1997 and translated into English for the first time by Andrea G. Labinger, Death as a Side Effect uses dark satire to effectively meld societal and personal tribulations. Although the Spanish edition of the book was selected by the Congreso de la Lengua Española as one of the 100 best Latin American novels published in the last 25 years, its themes and issues are universal.

(Originally posted at A Progressive on the Prairie.)
1 vota PrairieProgressive | Jan 2, 2011 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Ana Maria Shuaautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Labinger, Andrea G.Traduttoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato

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In Death as a Side Effect, Ana María Shua's brilliantly dark satire transports readers to a dystopic future Argentina where gangs of ad hoc marauders and professional thieves roam the streets while the wealthy purchase security behind fortified concrete walls and the elderly cower in their apartments in fear of being whisked off to state-mandated "convalescent" homes, never to return. Abandoned by his mistress, suffocated by his father, and estranged from his demented mother and ineffectual sister, Ernesto seeks his vanished lover. Hoping to save his dying father from the ministrations of a diabolical health-care system, he discovers that, ultimately, everyone is a patient, and the instruments wielded by the impersonal medical corps cut to the very heart of the social fabric.   The world of this novel, with its closed districts, unsafe travel, ubiquitous security cameras, and widespread artificiality and uncertainty, is as familiar as it is strange--and as instructive, in its harrowing way, as it is deeply entertaining. The Spanish edition has been selected by the Congreso de la Lengua Española as one of the one hundred best Latin American novels published in the last twenty-five years.

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