Ariel Dorfman is a Chilean-American author, born in Argentina, whose award-winning books in many genres have been published in more than fifty languages and his plays performed in more than one hundred countries. Among his works are the plays Death and the Maiden and Purgatorio, the novels The Suicide Museum (Other Press, 2023), Allegro (Other Press, 2025), Widows, and Konfidenz, and the memoirs Heading South, Looking North and Feeding on Dreams. He writes regularly for the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, New York Review of Books, The Nation, The Guardian, El Pais, and CNN. His stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Harper's, The Threepenny Review, and Index on Censorship, among others. A prominent human rights activist, he worked as press and cultural advisor to Salvador Allende's chief of staff in the final months before the 1973 military coup, and later spent many years in exile. He lives with his wife Angelica in Santiago, Chile, and Durham, North Carolina, where he is the Walter Hines Page Emeritus Professor of Literature at Duke University.
“A novel that is nigh Dostoyevskian in intensity. With it, Dorfman steps confidently from the realm of Latin American storyteller into the arena of a world novelist of the first category.” —Washington Post Book World “Exhilarating for its finely tuned unfolding but somber in its conclusions, Konfidenz demands a fundamental reexamination of the nature of trust.” —Publishers Weekly “Konfidenz builds a harrowing, chilly erotic tension…the novel enacts the unreliability of the world without loyalty it depicts.” —San Franciso Examiner “Tantalizing…a finely tuned investigation into obsession and trust during major worldwide political instability.” —Library Journal