
Member Reviews

Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird is a collection of dark and unique short stories from the author of Tender is the Flesh.
Though it had a few stories that I really enjoyed, I personally was not a big fan of Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird. I was expecting something fresh and terrifying, or even with a creeping sense of fear and it fell short of the mark in both fear and in my opinion, writing. I am a fan of short stories and of horror/thriller writing, but unfortunately not this.
Again, there were some great short stories sprinkled in there but not enough for me to really enjoy the whole collection.

Short stories often don’t work for me, but couldn’t resist this author. I ended up really enjoying… reminded me of telling ghost stories with friends in the basement during our teen years. The short story element really worked here!

I loved Tender is the Flesh, so I was happy to see that we’d be getting another translation of Agustina Bazterrica’s work. This is a collection of 20 short stories. These all have dark, literary themes, and I enjoyed reading the majority of them.
My favorites were Roberto, Unamuno’s Boxes, Anita and Happiness, Earth, A Hole Hides a House, and Mary Carminum. These were all dark with a twist at the end. I really didn’t know what was going to happen next!
These 20 stories are all rather short, so it was a really fast read for me. Especially since I didn’t want to put the book down; I kept wanting to see what the next story would bring! I’d recommend this to anyone into dark literature or fans of Tender is the Flesh.
Thank you to Scribner and NetGalley for the ARC.

I absolutely love dark and literary fiction and I wanted this collection to impede my thoughts, disrupt my mind and stay with me long after reading, ecspecially for such heavy content but unfortunately I think my expectations were set a bit too high, after having read, Tender is the Flesh." While I appreciate the literary writing style and the elevated societal implications of humanity, the stories within this collection simply didn't stay with me for too long.
Here are some of the stories I enjoyed the most though and a glimpse into each one's content:
▪︎ Mendez
▪︎ Candy Pink
▪︎ Anita and Happiness
▪︎ No Tears
▪︎ The Continuous Equality of the Circumference
▪︎ Mary Carminum
The stories did show great range, though, and certainly kept each page flip interesting...
^^^My favorites touched on neighbors, breakups, SA, otherworldly beings, family traditions, perfection, violence, hopelessness and a rating system. 👀 keeping it brief...as to let the next reader enjoy without knowing too much of what's to come!

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for this ARC! I was a big fan of Tender Is The Flesh so when I saw Agustina was releasing another book, I ran to request it. I throughly enjoyed these short stories and how unique they all were. Bazterrica’s writing is harrowing and flows so well. My favorite of the stories were Mary Carminum, Candy Pink, Dishwasher, and Unamuno’s Boxes.

20 short stories. I enjoyed the majority of them and by the end of many I was left saying “wtf” in a good way! Some were twisted and morbid and I loved them. These also include dark humor and a few of the stories had me laughing. I do feel that some could have been cut out and expanded on others instead but they all worked. The themes within each story were all similar in some ways which made this as a collection work well. I love anything Agustina Bazterrica writes so this was a win for me, As I read each story, I rated them and came out to an average of 3.5 but this is a 4 star collection for me because the vibes were what I wanted them to be. I can’t wait to read more by the author.

A deliciously dark collection of 19 short stories that depicts everything that is cruel, brutal and yet sometimes humorous about loss, death, murder, suicide, and the human experience. The writing is grotesque and macabre, and left me with a slightly haunted feeling.

This was my first book reading short stories and my first Agustina Bazterrica book and wow! I was so invested in each story, but was satisfied with each ending. You could tell how creative the author is. I'm curious to read Tender is the Flesh now.
Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for the eARC!

Agustina Bazterrica is the queen of unease.
The Argentine author of the wildly successful novel Tender is the Flesh is back with the newest English translated release, Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird; Stories. A chilling look into modern Argentina and the everyday horrors that haunt.
The collection is full of suspense and dread, and Bazterrica does a masterful job of creating a sense of unease. She explores the horror in our own daily sanity glitches. From story to story, the prose is unique, exceptional, dreadful, and agonizingly relevant to the daily horrors of life with unexpected and fluid twists. Readers are left wondering whether the suspected monsters are imaginary, fantastical, or coping mechanisms to a fractured individual.
The author's talent at describing characters' physique and faces is also a highlight, "she had the eyes of a filthy, infertile, solitary cat."
If you enjoyed her first novel, this genre bending collection is a must for your bookshelf. This was the first time I had a book hangover from a short story. It took me a couple of days to continue, and I did not put it down after.

This collection of short stories from the author of Tender is the Flesh was something I was very much anticipating and while I enjoyed some of the tales, some I did not really care for/could not get into.
My favorites of the collection/the stories that felt the most impactful for me were:
- Mary Carinium
- A Hole Hides a House
- The Solitary Ones
- Candy Pink
- Earth
I really do enjoy Bazterrica’s writing style and how she has the range to write some beautiful, almost poetry like prose about horrific and dark topics but can also go the complete opposite where it’s very unhinged and twisted so you’re a bit stunned by the end, so she’s definitely someone I would love to read from again even though some of the stories within 19 Claws were a miss for me.

While Agustina Bazterrica can write a fantastic future dystopian type story, they fail in the short story category for me.
The writing style was hit or miss in this collection. Sometimes I had to skim some of the story because it was not engaging me. It took me awhile to complete the book. Maybe next time I read some more Bazterrica, it'll be more like Tender is the Flesh.
Thank you #NetGalley for #NineteenClawsandaBlackBird

Y'all, it's with a heavy heart that I report I am pulling the plug on this one. It's a big ole' DNF for me.
I was so excited for this collection and really wanted to love it. I started it last night and read the first four stories, making it, I think to around 20%.
While it is a very short collection, even the thought of picking it back up fills me with dread. I just can't do it. Out of the first four stories, if I had been rating them individually, three of them would have been 2-stars and one of them would have been a 1-star.
I cannot connect with the author's writing style in any way. It says nothing really of this collection; it's personal taste. I know a lot of Readers will pick this up and love it and I can't wait to read their glowing reviews. Sadly, that's just not my journey with this one. I am not leaving a star rating on any social/public sites, as I feel that would be unfair to this author since I didn't complete the collection.
Thank you to the publisher, Scribner, for providing me with a copy to read and review. I'm so sad this didn't work for me and wish this collection all the success upon its U.S. release!

4/5 stars
i was at a loss for words for a while trying to review this. i’ve never read anything like this before- these stories were absolutely brutal. this novel contemplates some of the most insidious and nightmarish parts of humanity supremely well. the exploration of death and the devolution of sanity made me think a lot. the way bazterrica writes about the ways we twist and contort ourselves to fit into each of our own worlds (and the ways we are twisted and contorted by societal oppressors) was haunting, dark, and, often, unfortunately realistic.
there were definitely highs and lows; some stories made me go “oh wow” and others “...what?” i think what made this so interesting as a whole is that it was very engaging despite the stories often being incredibly strange. it maintained enough humanity and small humors to be relatable. it was like, constant gorey symbolism for many issues that plague society today.
i would definitely recommend this to any fans of of disturbing, funky, feminist-leaning horror.
thank you to netgalley for the free copy in exchange for an honest review!

I love horror anthologies, and I went into this one without knowing the author and what their style was. Unfortunately, this ended up not being one I’d read again, but there were definitely some good stories in it! We have…
A Light, Swift And Monstrous Sound 2/5
This was a beautifully written and horrific story about a suicide, but a bit short and vague
Roberto 3.5/5
This was even shorter than the first story, but I thought it was pretty funny (despite the disturbing subject matter!)
Unamuno’s Boxes 3.5/5
Fantasy meets reality in this strange story about fingernail clippings.
Candy Pink 4/5
So far the best in the book, a little story about a breakup and breakdown.
Anita and Happiness 3/5
Are aliens real? Just ask this man…
Dishwasher 4/5
This is, so far, the longest story, and quite a trippy one.
Earth 4/5
Ooh, I liked this creepy little tale of yore…
Perfect Symmetry 5/5
The first five-star story for me - I wasn’t expecting the ending!
The Wolf’s Breath 1/5
This was more of a poem than a short story, and I’m not into it.
Teicher Vs. Nietzsche 5/5
Man, do I love cats! Cats that ruin sporting matches are the best.
The Dead 4.5/5
Where do the dead go after they die? The moon, of course.
Elena-Marie Sandoz 2/5
The ending sentence was good, but I didn’t care for this ghostly story.
The Slowness of Pleasure 3/5
I wanted to love this one because of the beautiful writing, but I didn’t.
No Tears 1.5/5
Eh. This one wasn’t it for me.
The Continuous Equality of the Circumference 4/5
A girl wants to be a circle. You go, girl!
A Hole Hides a House 3/5
This guy really should have fixed his roof…
Hell 2/5
I would have either liked this to be longer or shorter, I’m not sure.
Architecture 1.5/5
I just didn’t care for this one, either.
Mary Carminum 4/5
This one was humorous and a great tale of karma. Catholic karma?
The Solitary Ones 4/5
This could’ve been a good episode of The Twilight Zone!
I love when anthologies end with a good one, and this one did. Overall, I think this author isn’t for me. It could be the translation, but I think it’s more the story type. Some stories were vague and cryptic, the ramblings of a mind. I prefer more plot-driven stories, even if they’re only a few pages long. The writing was flawless, and quite poetic (even when the subject matter wasn’t) - the stories just weren’t my style overall. 2.5/5, rounded up because the writing truly is stellar.
(Thank you to Scribner, Agustina Bazterrica, and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my review. This book is slated to be released on July 20, 2023.)

When I learned about the upcoming English translation of Agustina Bazterrica’s Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird, I was eager to pick it because their unique and thought provoking novel Tender is the Flesh definitely left an impression on me. My eagerness to pick up this book quickly dimmed when I learned that it was short stories, which are usually an automatic no for me. But my interest in reading more of Bazterrica’s work won out and I decided to take a chance. I’m glad I did. This collection of nineteen stories is quite dark and deals with a number of heavy topics with writing that can definitely pull you right into a story. Please be sure to check trigger warnings for this one! Standouts for me are:
-A Light, Swift, and Monstrous Sound: a neighbor’s suicide forces the narrator out of their ordered happiness and shatters their life of comfort.
-Candy Pink: a second person story full of crazed emotions after a breakup.
-Dishwasher: a story where Jane makes peace with being one of the “crazies.”
-Earth: a daughter is abandoned after taking action against the father that hurt her.
-Perfect Symmetry: a man's final wish is granted and he creates a perfectly composed last meal.
-Mary Carminum: an absurd date with a rock band full of Mother Marys.
A few threads I found interesting stories were thoughts around whether inanimate objects or plants have feelings and the act of burying yourself.
There were a few stories I didn’t connect with or enjoy as much but I think this is to be expected with short story collections and makes it more likely everyone can find something they appreciate.

This unique short story collection is an interesting combination of disturbing and dark humor. Agustina Bazterrica has some captivating ideas and explores themes of abuse, murder, suicide, and violence. As with all short story collections, some are more memorable than others and I think I would have preferred a little more horror overall. If you enjoy dark short stories, I would give this one a try!
Thank you to Netgalley and Scribner Books for the arc!

So I have had this author on my list for some time now and am so glad I finally got my hands on some of her work. This will not be the last piece by her I read!
I think going into her short stories just having an idea of the genre was all I needed to know to know I’d enjoy this. I may have read through this very quickly, but I find that these stories will not be quickly forgotten.
These are dark short stories, but I read them as one would listen to tales told by the fireside. These felt like old legends and fairy tales, but so fresh and different from your typical expectations. She’s definitely bold with her descriptions and plots.
For each story, no matter the length of it, I was fully immersed in the description or mindset of the different characters. These were stories that I could see clearly visually as well as feel and hear and smell. All senses are brought to life for the reader while experiencing these tales.
Thank you so much to the author, Agustina Bazterrica, the translator, Sarah Moses, Scribner and NetGalley for the eARC of Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird in exchange for my review!

This book is full of short stories. I have never read a short story collection before, however I have read Tender is the Flesh and gave it 5 stars. This collection started off with the first two stories being 5 stars for me. So I had high expectations. As I kept reading, each story started to bore or confuse me. I was eager to keep reading, looking for another 5 star, until about the half way mark. At this point I was still interested in reading but read for it to be over.
Most of the stories are unfortunately forget for me, except the first two.
Thank you to NetGalley for a copy of this ebook!

I received an Advanced Reader's copy of this book via NetGalley. I wanted to read this book of short stories after having read the author's other translated book, Tender is the Flesh. This set of nineteen stories has left me mind-boggled on how I feel about it, because while I thoroughly enjoyed some of the stories, others just seemed to really miss the mark for me and even though this ebook was only 107 pages long, I felt as though it took forever to finish. Bazterrica has a beautiful way with words, even when describing the macabre, but several of the stories still lacked for me. I am also very critical of short stories because typically, they leave me disappointed that they weren't fully developed into larger novels. While Bazterrica writes in prose, it honestly reads almost like poetry. She does a fantastic job of exploring supernatural and paranormal horror, but I feel her real talent seems to be in showcasing the disturbing and terrifying realities humans face in the world.

If you enjoy your horror with a side of dark and twisty humor, this is a great short story collection to check out. Some of these stories are hilarious, and at the same time, wildly disturbing. Other stories are just outright terrifying. Read with caution.
I love the range that is covered in these stories; from children that do murder to a guy that will choose to fall in love with an alien woman, these are highly imaginative and expertly written. Just like Bazterrica’s novel Tender is the Flesh, a lot of these stories will be lurking in my subconscious for the foreseeable future.
Content warning: violence; sexual assault; murder; gore; body horror
I received a digital ARC of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.