On the outskirts of Belen del Chami, a town that has yet to appear on any map of Colombia, the mute Salomón Palacios is murdered a few steps away from his home. His widow, the courageous and foul-mouthed Hipolita Arenas, completely loses her sanity and confronts the paramilitaries and local politicians, challenging them to also kill her and her two fatherless sons. Yet as Hipolita faces her husband's murderers on her desperate journey, she finds an unexpected calling to stay alive. This poetic and hypnotizing novel, told from the perspective of Salomon's ghost, denounces the brutal killings of innocent citizens and at the same time celebrates the invisible: imagination, memories, hope, and the connection to afterlife.
Author bio
Ricardo Silva Romero is one of Colombia’s most beloved writers. He is a prolific novelist, columnist, journalist, screenwriter, and film critic. In 2007 he was selected as one of the Bogotá39, a list of the best young writers in Latin America. Río Muerto is a fearless novel exploring the role of violence in Colombian society from an entirely new perspective. It is Silva Romero’s first book to be published in English.
Translator bio
Victor Meadowcroft is a translator from Spanish and Portuguese and a graduate of the University of East Anglia’s master’s program in literary translation. His published translations include Toño the Infallible by Evelio Rosero (co-translation with Anne McLean, New Directions, 2022), which was shortlisted for the PEN Translation Prize and longlisted for the Queen Sofía Spanish Institute of Translation Prize, and This World Does Not Belong to Us by Natalia García Freire (World Editions, 2022), which was short listed for the TA First Translation Prize and the Premio Valle Inclán.
Praise for Río Muerto
Lithubs The Best International Fiction of February 2025
CrimeReads The Most Anticipated Crime Books of 2025
"Among this novel's merits is its powerful celebration of the will to live, dovetailed with an evocation of the love members of a family have for one another, even under the most brutal and apparently hopeless circumstances." --The Arts Fuse
"Río Muerto is a superb short novel that bridges the gap between horror and crime in very unique ways. Río Muerto is a window into a violent world as well as a tale about a family suffering at the hands of paramilitarism and bad neighbors. Silva Romero is a star in Colombia and hopefully this, his first novel to be translated to English, will put him on the map and ensure we get more of his work soon."--Gabino Iglesias, CrimeReads
"Colombian writer Silva Romero makes his English-language debut with a wrenching tale of murder and survival. Near the remote Colombian town of Belen del Chami, a mute man named Salomon Palacios is gunned down by hooded assassins in 1992. His distraught widow, Hipolita, sets off on a rambling odyssey of retribution, accompanied by their sons Max, 12, and Segundo, eight. Salomon, meanwhile, has become a ghost, and he meets with the ghosts of other victims of political violence. Romero captures the intensity of the family's grief, as they're poorly consoled by a gravedigger and are ignored by the police, all while Salomon shadows them, unable to intervene. Silva Romero seamlessly weaves lyrical depictions of Salomon's afterlife, a "dense, black, clammy, stinking jungle that looked to him like hell," with pointed observations of the country's decades-long guerrilla war, which "continues to break the extraordinary open hearts of thousands of Colombians." Meadowcroft's crystalline translation introduces readers to an important Latin American voice. (Feb.)"--Publishers Weekly
"In this novel, Silva Romero explores with clarity and precision the way violence weighs on a society like Colombia, which seems to have naturalized it in a disturbing way."--ADN Bogotá
"Written in visceral prose." --El Tiempo
"A book that will persist as a key representative of literature dealing with the violence that devastated this country during the armed conflict." --El Espectador
"Río Muerto is a portrait of Colombia turned into a book, a work we should have in our homes and read with our families instead of watching the news bulletins. (...) This short novel by Ricardo Silva Romero encapsulates a hope beyond the kind revealed in the story itself: the kind of hope that reflects the power of contemporary Colombian fiction to convert the horror of war into literary art." --Diario de Paz Colombia
"In Río Muerto, Ricardo Silva Romero recreates in poetic and intense prose another side of the horror of our era." --Abisinia Review
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