Selva Almada


Selva Almada is an Argentine writer of poetry, short stories, and novels. She expanded into nonfiction in 2014 with the book Chicas muertas.

Career

Selva Almada studied Social Communication in Paraná, although she left this program to enter the Professorship of Literature at Paraná's Institute of Higher Education. She began giving shape to her first works, some of which were developed from the workshop that Maria Elena Lotringer offered at the School of Communication.
Her first stories were published in the Paraná weekly Análisis. From 1997 to 1998 she directed a brief self-managed cultural literary project called CAelum Blue.
Her training as a storyteller was largely established in Buenos Aires in the creative space of Alberto Laiseca's literary workshop.
Her literary output gained prestige and praise from critics in 2012 with the publication of her first novel, El viento que arrasa. Claríns magazine highlighted it as "the novel of the year". It has since been reissued several times, was published abroad, and translated into French, Portuguese, Dutch, and German. In 2016, it was the basis for an opera by Beatriz Catani and.
With her nonfiction chronicle Chicas muertas, Almada brought to light three femicides that occurred in different Argentine provinces in the 1980s, making herself known as a feminist writer.
Her authority as a writer has been publicly confirmed by literary figures such as Chilean writer Diego Zúñiga and the journalist, writer, and essayist Beatriz Sarlo.
Her stories have been included in various anthologies from by the publishers Norma, Mondadori, and Ediciones del Dock, among others.
She gives various literary workshops. From March to July 2017, she directed the Taller de relato autobiográfico Mirarse el ombligo at Escuela Entrepalabras.

Personal life

Selva Almada was born in Villa Elisa, Entre Ríos and lived there until she was 17. In 1991 she moved to Paraná to study, first Social Communication, then Literature, and lived in that city until 1999.
Since 2000 she has lived in Buenos Aires.
She made frequent trips to Chaco Province which, along with her rural experience of childhood and youth spent in the Argentine Littoral, gave rise to several of the environments and themes of her books.

Works