Rachel's Reviews > Tender Is the Flesh

Tender Is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica
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it was amazing
bookshelves: covers-i-love, 2020, in-translation, women-in-translation, dystopia, netgalley, favorites

Effectively an anti-factory farming polemic satirized to its shocking, inevitable conclusion, Tender Is the Flesh is a horrifying and grotesque piece of work.  Translated from the Spanish brilliantly by Sarah Moses, it tells the story of a man named Marcos who recently lost his son to a cot death and is estranged from his wife as a result.  Marcos works at a local processing plant - but instead of cattle, the plant farms and slaughters humans, following a virus which infected all non-human animals, rendering their meat unsafe to eat.  But these people are no longer referred to as humans; so desensitized is everyone to their new dietary reality. 

This book made me feel physically ill every time I picked it up, but I found it equally hard to put it down.  I've been a vegetarian for most of my life, primarily in protest against factory farming, so it's safe to say that this novel's central conceit resonated strongly enough to compel me to keep reading, but it would be reductive to say that condemning the meat industry is the only thing Bazterrica is doing here.  This book focuses equally on the question of what it means to be human (I can't get a sort of half-baked Never Let Me Go comparison out of my head, even if the similarities truly do end there - but there's a reason that's my favorite book; it's a theme that I find endlessly fascinating to wrestle with) and the ways in which we allow our personal ethics to be shaped by those in positions of power. 

It's not a flawless book - I think the (air-tight) worldbuilding occasionally overpowers the character-driven part of the novel, which I was honestly fine with until something happened that made me wish the character development hadn't been quite so withheld from the reader, so I initially rated this 4 stars when I finished, but on second thought, I think this book will be seared into my brain forever, and I have nothing but respect and admiration for what Bazterrica has achieved here. 

This is not an easy book to recommend, and I cannot emphasize just how strong of a stomach you need to make it through this, but, somewhat perversely, it's not a hard book to love.  I'd say it's probably the single most disturbing thing I have ever read (A Clockwork Orange has been dethroned at last), but that is in no way a criticism.

Thank you to Netgalley and Scribner for the advanced copy provided in exchange for an honest review.
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Reading Progress

December 14, 2019 – Shelved
December 14, 2019 – Shelved as: to-read
December 22, 2019 – Shelved as: covers-i-love
May 26, 2020 – Started Reading
May 26, 2020 – Shelved as: 2020
May 26, 2020 – Shelved as: in-translation
May 26, 2020 – Shelved as: women-in-translation
May 27, 2020 – Finished Reading
May 29, 2020 – Shelved as: dystopia
May 29, 2020 – Shelved as: netgalley
May 3, 2021 – Shelved as: favorites

Comments Showing 1-7 of 7 (7 new)

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message 1: by Claire (new) - added it

Claire Wow this sounds incredible


Rachel Omg Claire!!!! You’ve gotta read this!!!


message 3: by Jenny (new)

Jenny Cooke (Bookish Shenanigans) A book that's more disturbing than A Clockwork Orange is quite a brag.


message 4: by Claire (new) - added it

Claire I feel like this is 100 me and I need it urgently. Our taste alignment is alive and well Rachel


Tracy Conway Great review, my review of this book also involved a statement of it being burned into my brain because of its brutality. You said that it dethroned A Clockwork Orange, so I will humbly recommend two other books that I believe might knock ACO down a few more pegs: Kosinski’s The Painted Bird and McCathy’s The Road.


Sarah Excellent review of a must-read book. It is time for our society to stop eating animals.


Asha Totally agree Sarah. And I agree with the reviewer that this book is an allegory about the industrialised cruelty of animal factory farming.


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