Pink Slime, Fernanda Trias
Pink Slime, Fernanda Trias
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Pink Slime

Author: Fernanda Trías

Narrator: Frankie Corzo

Unabridged: 6 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/02/2024


Synopsis

Longlisted for the NATIONAL BOOK AWARD for Translated Literature • Named a BEST BOOK of the Year by NPR, Esquire, Publishers Weekly, and ScreenRant • “The disconcerting familiarity of this strange, windswept world will haunt you.” —Esquire

A hair-raising, poetic work of literary horror and climate fiction about a woman and the people who depend on her as the world around them edges toward apocalypse.

In a city ravaged by a mysterious plague, a woman tries to understand why her world is falling apart. An algae bloom has poisoned the previously pristine air that blows in from the sea. Inland, a secretive corporation churns out the only food anyone can afford—a revolting pink paste, made of an unknown substance. In the short, desperate breaks between deadly windstorms, our narrator stubbornly tends to her few remaining relationships: with her difficult but vulnerable mother; with the ex-husband for whom she still harbors feelings; with the boy she nannies, whose parents sent him away even as terrible threats loomed. Yet as conditions outside deteriorate further, her commitment to remaining in place only grows—even if staying means being left behind.

An evocative elegy for a safe, clean world, Pink Slime is buoyed by humor and its narrator’s resiliency. This vivid and unforgettable translated novel explores the place where love, responsibility, and self-preservation converge.

About Fernanda Trías

Fernanda Trías is an award-winning Uruguayan writer based in Colombia, and the author of four novels and two short story collections. Her novels The Rooftop and Pink Slime have been published in English, and translation rights to her work have been sold in twenty languages. Pink Slime was longlisted for the National Book Award for Translated Literature and received Uruguay’s National Literature Prize, the Bartolomé Hidalgo Critics’ Award, and Mexico’s Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize. In 2025, Trías became only the second writer in the history of the Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize to win the award twice, receiving it for The Mountain Woman, which was widely featured on best-of-the-year lists across the Spanish-speaking world.


Reviews

Goodreads review by julieta on May 23, 2023

De entrada, se trata de una distopía, una ciudad que vive un estado horrible, la gente se está enfermando, los peces se murieron, las aves huyeron, nadie entiende muy bien lo que pasa. Una historia en paralelo a la pandemia que sigue muy presente en el mundo. Aunque dudo que haya sido escrita despué......more

Goodreads review by emma on November 05, 2024

just girly things! and true to my personal female experience, something just felt off here — i don't know if this was strangely translated, or just lacking in plot and answers, but this felt very concerned with building a slow-moving and confusing dystopian world and not much else. the perspective, wh......more

Goodreads review by Hannah (hngisreading) on August 08, 2024

Rating/reviewing later. Need to sit with this one. Let it steep.......more