Fairy tale meets detective drama in this David Lynch-like novel by a
writer Jonathan Lethem calls "one of Mexico's greatest . . . we are just
barely beginning to catch up to what she has to offer."
A fairy tale run amok, The Taiga Syndrome follows an unnamed
Ex-Detective as she searches for a couple who has fled to the far
reaches of the earth. A betrayed husband is convinced by a brief
telegram that his second ex-wife wants him to track her down--that she
wants to be found. He hires the Ex-Detective, who sets out with a
translator into a snowy, hostile forest where strange things happen and
translation betrays both sense and one's senses. Tales of Hansel and
Gretel and Little Red Riding Hood haunt the Ex-Detective's quest into a
territory overrun with the primitive excesses of
Capitalism--accumulation and expulsion, corruption and cruelty--though
the lessons of her journey are more experiential than moral: that just
as love can fly away, sometimes unloving flies away as well. That
sometimes leaving everything behind is the only thing left to do.