El Viento Que Arrasa Selva Almada !new! Guide
"El Viento que Arrasa" ha recibido elogios de la crítica especializada, quienes han destacado la originalidad y la fuerza de la narrativa de Almada. La novela ha sido comparada con obras de autoras como Mariana Enríquez y Claudia Piñeiro, y ha sido considerada como una de las voces más innovadoras y prometedoras de la literatura argentina contemporánea.
His relationship with his daughter, Leni, is the novel’s dark heart. He has raised her as a tool for revival. She leads the singing, hands out tracts, and is taught that her body is a vessel of sin. When Gringo makes a crass joke about her not being a real woman, Pearson’s reaction is chillingly violent—not a physical blow, but a psychological one. He reveals that he has conditioned Leni since childhood to see any sexual impulse as demonic possession. He has, in essence, erased her. The wind that sweeps through Pearson is the wind of absolute ideology, which flattens all individuality in its path. el viento que arrasa selva almada