In these hilarious and heartbreaking letters, Cecilia Gentili reinvents the trans memoir, putting the confession squarely between the writer and her enemies, paramours and friends. Writing to childhood figures such as her rapist's daughter, her father's mistress, her best friend, and her mother, Gentili probes deeply into the bitter cruelty, buried secrets, and delicious gossip of a small town. Is she here for revenge, or forgiveness? Both! And more! A story of sex, theft, murder, motherhood, and outrageous fashion choices, Faltas is a beautiful, messy meditation on what it takes to heal, and even grow.
One of the best memoirs I've ever read.--Autostraddle
A little earthquake of a book.--Xtra
I don't know if I've ever read anything so emotionally honest and morally rigorous. [Gentili] manages radical empathy without compromising her own emotional integrity . . . It's funny and clear and vivid and painful and also so complex . . . Fuck all the college reading lists for Ethics 101. Just assign FALTAS. It's funnier than Kant, and more realistic.--them
A painstaking, personal and power-filled manifesto for survivors and trans women and anyone dreaming and yearning on the margins.--Janet Mock, author of Redefining Realness
A brilliant writer whose Faltas (which is Spanish for errors) are infallible reports from the front lines of trans literature. This book is irresistible.--Edmund White, author of A Boy's Own Story
These are bewitching accounts that do everything all at once: accuse, forgive, mock, heal, teach, seduce; stories that transcend classification and reality even as they tell hard truths. Cecilia Gentili is a singular voice that you can't miss.--Torrey Peters, author of Detransition, Baby
FALTAS pulsates with the same thrill as listening in secretly to a phone call, opening someone else's mail, reading a strangers' diary. You know it's wrong but you would do anything to keep going.--Morgan M Page, writer, Framing Agnes
In some ways I may never finish processing this book. Gentili's writing is so raw without ever feeling unpolished, so personal and honest and unflinching. Alongside Dream Rooms and A Year Without a Name: A Memoir, it is a trans memoir that apologizes for nothing and refuses to make compromises for cisgender readers. Gentili's treatment of the trauma central to FALTAS is unparalleled; nothing feels sensationalized but nothing is shied away from. A phenomenal, important book.--Gus Thompson, The Ivy Bookshop (Baltimore, MD)
A revelation . . . emotionally and ethically complex . . . a story of learning to work with what little power one has . . . an outstanding quality of FALTAS is that it avoids melodrama and moralizing. What it depicts is not a fallen world but the ordinary state of things.--McKenzie Wark, Liber
Literary Nonfiction. Memoir. Latinx Studies. LGBTQ+ Studies. Women's Studies.
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