Gabriela Wiener (Lima, 1975) is author of the crónicas collections
Sexografías (Sexographies, Restless Books, 2018), Nueve Lunas,
Mozart, la iguana con priapismo y otras historias, Llamada perdida
and Nueve Lunas (Nine Moons, Restless Books, 2020). Her work also
includes the poetry collection Ejercicios para el endurecimiento
del espíritu. Her latest book is Dicen de mí (2017). She writes
regularly for the newspapers El País (Spain) and La República
(Peru). She also writes for several American and European
magazines, such as Etiqueta Negra (Peru), Anfibia (Argentina),
Corriere della Sera (Italy), XXI (France), and Virginia Quarterly
Review (United States). In Madrid, she worked as editor of the
Spanish edition of Marie Claire. She left the magazine in 2014 to
work on her first novel.
Jessica Powell received her BA in International Studies from Vassar
College, her MA in Latin American Studies from Stanford University,
and completed her Ph.D. in UCSB’s Department of Spanish and
Portuguese, specializing in literary translation and
twentieth-century Latin American Literature. Since completing her
doctorate in 2006, she has published dozens of translations of
literary works by a wide variety of Latin American writers. She was
the recipient of a 2011 National Endowment for the Arts Translation
Fellowship in support of her translation of Antonio Benítez Rojo's
novel Woman in Battle Dress (City Lights, 2015), which was a
finalist for the PEN Center USA Literary Award for Translation. Her
translation of Wicked Weeds by Pedro Cabiya (Mandel Vilar Press,
2016), was named a finalist for the 2017 Best Translated Book Award
and made the longlist for the 2017 National Translation Award. Her
translation, the first-ever into English of Pablo Neruda’s
book-length poem, venture of the infinite man, was published by
City Lights Books in October of 2017. Recent translations include
Edna Iturralde’s award-winning book, Green Was My Forest, published
in September, 2018. Jessica has been an adjunct Spanish Professor
at Santa Barbara City College, and also works as a subtitler,
editor and adapter for film and television. She lives in Santa
Barbara with her husband, Abe Powell, and their two children,
Olivia and Leo.
“With certain writers it doesn’t matter what the book is about,
because the brain that created it is so euphoric, so wicked, so
irascibly specific, that you want to clear out a corner of your own
headspace and beckon the author inside as a permanent tenant. It is
for this reason that I, a person who has never been pregnant and
has little interest in reproduction, can recommend a book about a
pregnant lady who watches trash TV and dreams that she’s going to
give birth to a monkey…. [Gabriela Wiener’s] mind is a beautiful
and unique organ…. It’s the sort of book you will read and pass on
to your friends with a note that says TRUST ME taped to the cover.
You needn’t possess a baby to enjoy it. Having once been a fetus is
enough.”
*New York Magazine*
Praise for Sexographies:“No other writer in the Spanish-speaking
world is as fiercely independent and thoroughly irreverent as
Gabriela Wiener. Constantly testing the limits of genre and gender,
Wiener's work as a cronista (which roughly translates, but is by no
means a direct synonym, of nonfiction writer) has bravely unveiled
truths some may prefer remain concealed about a range of topics,
from the daily life of polymorphous desire to the tiring labor of
maternity.”—Cristina Rivera Garza, author of The Iliac Crest“This
collection of essays [opens] on the outskirts of Lima, jumps to a
swinger’s party in Barcelona, and next a squirt expert’s apartment.
This book can feel psychologically hazardous to read; it pushes you
to answer the questions Wiener asks herself: Would I? Could I? Will
I?”—Angela Ledgerwood, Esquire Best Books of 2018“These are essays
of unabashed honesty and uncommon freedom of mind, bravely reported
and beautifully composed. I hadn’t known how hungry I’d been for
this book, how I’d needed it and wanted other books to be it.
Sexographies is an antidote and a revelation, and Gabriela Wiener
is a brilliant documenter of sex and life as they really
are.”—Kristin Dombek, author of The Selfishness of Others“In her
native Peru, Gabriela Wiener has a reputation as a gonzo journalist
who takes an active role in whatever subject she investigates,
which as often as not involves sex, and not the vanilla variety. In
this collection, her first translated into English, we meet a
notorious polygamous pornographer; go to 6&9, a Barcelona sex
club; interview the cruel Lady Monique de Nemours, a world-class
dominatrix; visit Vanessa, a member of the European community of
Latin American trans sex workers; get a first-hand look at the
perils of threesomes; and explore other topics a tad too risqué to
even name in a family newspaper. Suffice to say, Wiener’s
free-wheeling style is hugely entertaining.”—Sarah Murdoch, Toronto
Star"Reading Gabriela Wiener is a joy. Over the years, her work has
made me cry, laugh, hurt, and most importantly, dream. Her essays
are daring, intimate, and honest, containing the self-awareness of
a poet and the sharp focus of a marksman. I'd follow her
anywhere."—Daniel Alarcón, author of At Night We Walk in
Circles“One of the most interesting writers of this generation is
Gabriela Wiener, a Peruvian journalist best known for her
high-spirited explorations of female sexuality.... Wiener is witty
and fast-paced; many of her experiences, sexual and otherwise, are
hard-won, territories explored and sometimes conquered, despite her
neurotic misgivings, with courage and aplomb. Part of her appeal
lies in the fact that she sometimes writes about sexual topics that
have not been well explored, especially by women, and a sense of
incredulity is part of the pleasure of reading her work. ‘Is she
really going to do that?’ the reader wonders. ‘Is she really going
to write (and so openly) about doing that?’ And then she does, and
there’s a slight but perceptible shift in the world because she
did.”—Lisa Fetchko, Los Angeles Review of Books“With sizzling prose
and journalistic attentiveness, Wiener honors the no-clothes rule.
She exposes her readers to not only her body, but also to the
neuroses, fears, and fantasies that come with it. True to the
first-person style of gonzo journalism, each of Wiener’s fifteen
transgressive crónicas pull readers into penetrative commentaries
on infidelity, abortion, and threesomes, not to mention the
ever-elusory ‘Ninja Squirt.’... Sexographies strikes the delicate
balance between carnal and curious…. It [expands] the meaning of
what pleasure in life can be, sexual or otherwise.”—Madeline Day,
The Paris Review“What Peruvian essayist and “gonzo” journalist,
Wiener, does in this collection is endlessly fascinating. Whether
experiencing sexual subcultures or an ayahuasca trip, she uses
herself as the point of departure to delve into the infinite
manifestations of being human.”— Keaton, Brazos Bookstore (Houston,
TX), Best Nonfiction Books of 2018“Gabriela Wiener is a Peruvian
sex writer, and Sexografias is a book of her collected essays.
However, she doesn’t just stay on the carnal, and uses her
explorations of egg donation, swingers parties, cruising, and
squirting as channels into meditations on motherhood, death, and
immigration, all while staying sharp and funny and wild.”—
Alejandra Oliva, Remezcla
“A Peruvian journalist’s vibrant musings on pregnancy and
childbirth. In this whip-smart follow-up to Sexographies (2018),
the author details her nine months of pregnancy as anything but
pastel. Wiener interweaves facts on embryonic development and other
scientific elements with visceral experience and accounts of her
rabbit-hole internet searches to reveal the anxiety of her first
full-term pregnancy…. Such dark, fertile forays signal Wiener's
original take on the simultaneously common and unique experience of
pregnancy…. The author's ruminations are consistently provocative,
digging into areas many are not willing to go…. Wiener's
reflections on her relationship with her mother, which included
microaggressions and tense exchanges, are also illuminating….
Refreshingly literary and offbeat—a mother-to-be book for
firebrands.”
*Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review*
“Provocative, offbeat, and always insightful, Gabriela Wiener’s
follow-up to Sexographies does not disappoint. The book charts
Wiener’s thoughts on pregnancy and motherhood during her own
pregnancy with her signature daring and candidness. The second of
her books to be translated into English, Nine Moons reads like the
delightfully uncomfortable sex ed class you didn’t know you
wanted.”
—Nika, Books Are Magic (Brooklyn, NY)
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