Book Review
The Unworthy (2025)
by Agustina Bazterrica
I was excited for his novel by Bazterrica, author of the excellent Tender is the Flesh and a slightly less excellent but still very good collection of short stories. The description had me drooling- promising a tale that combined dystopic lit and religious obsession. To be fair, Bazterrica does indeed deliver on the promise, but in extremely minimal fashion, at 192 pages The Unworthy is in line with other recent works of literary fiction- short is in, unless it's an extremely long book, but I really wanted more. The whole deal here is that this one of those books where the protagonist is keeping a journal a la Anne Frank- which, honestly, came to mind more than once while I was reading The Unworthy, it's a technique that goes hand-in-hand with the development of the novel as an art form- Pamela, by Samuel Richardson, one of the first novels was an epistolary novel. In that sense, it works that this book is so short, it's hard to imagine this protagonist getting deep into details when she is writing with ink she makes out of mashed up bugs. Mashed up bugs, in fact, feature prominently, with the girls in the novel subsisting largely on a diet of crickets. Not ground up cricket protein powder but actual crickets. Ultimately, I thought The Unworthy was good but it didn't live up to my perhaps unrealistic expectations.
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