'Bracingly unbookish...The after-effect is more like that of a video game or Marvel comic, with both the brightness and unabashed flatness those entail. Darkly satisfying...A darkly satisfying tale.' Guardian 'A novella in nine dramatic acts loaded with images, moments suspended in time that evolve into an extended dream, or rather a cautionary tale...The author of playful, prophetic, unnerving books that deserve to be read several times, with dialogue so telling it eats into your brain rather like the worm in the Redeemer's preferred mescal, Herrera is a writer for our doomed epoch.' Irish Times 'Herrera's brilliantly surreal turns of phrase mirror the strangeness of the world: he knows that brutal everyday truths are best revealed through dreams. Blood-soaked, driven deep and expertly written.' Spectator 'Herrera combines lyricism with wry, black humour and employs a range of registers, colloquialisms and neologisms...In extraordinary prose he creates stark landscapes and surreal scenarios which remain with you long after the final pages...A major new talent.' Huffington Post 'Yuri Herrera's tiny, beautiful novels each conjure myth and metaphor from a contemporary experience in a precise location, transformed by archaic-colloquial prose.' Times Literary Supplement 'A wondrous mash-up of styles which works solely and splendidly due to Herrera's sureness of touch.' New Internationalist 'As with many great and weighty storytellers, it's hard to avoid oxymorons while describing Herrera's achievements. His stories have the impact and ambition of epics but clock in at around 100 pages. The Transmigration of Bodies has gravity and insight, as well as historical and literary allusions, which override the zeitgeist and suggest something mythical.' Big Issue 'Herrera's prose is beyond hard-boiled: it's baked dry by the unrelenting desert sun, then picked clean by vultures.' Boston Review 'In the vein of Frank Miller's tale of crime and underworld, Sin City, and tinged with classic, yet ironic, Shakespearian tragedy.' Electric Literature 'Herrera switches rapidly between the tropes of screwball comedy, hard-boiled thriller, apocalyptic fiction, and existential tragedy...There's plenty to admire about this allegorical vision of a country under lockdown, where violence and death have ceased to be the motors for fiction, instead becoming the backdrop of everyday life.' Bookforum 'Mexico's Yuri Herrera is a rare thing: a writer to get truly excited about...It is writing that is simultaneously concise and epic, dynamically plotted and intelligent, aware of literary heritage and stunningly original...This is stunning writing that demands and deserves attention.' Saturday Paper '[The Transmigration of Bodies] captures the feel of the post-epidemic world with consummate ease: the paranoia and desperation are almost palpable.' BookMooch 'Herrera knows what he is talking about and says it as it is, with power and without restraint.' Otago Daily Times