Mariana Enríquez


Mariana Enríquez is an Argentine journalist, novelist, and short story writer. She is a part of the group of writers known as "new Argentine narrative". Her short stories fall within the horror and gothic genres and have been published in international magazines such as Granta, Electric Literature, Asymptote, McSweeney's, Virginia Quarterly Review, and The New Yorker.
Among her works, the short story collection Things We Lost in the Fire stands out, which received the Premis Ciutat de Barcelona 2017 in the category of Literature in Spanish, and the novel Our Share of Night, for which she won the Premio Herralde de Novela 2019, the Premio Celsius 2019, the Grand Prix 2022, and others.
In journalism, Enríquez serves as deputy editor of the cultural supplement "Radar" of the Argentine newspaper Página/12. She holds a degree in Journalism and Social Communication from the National University of La Plata. Her work encompasses chronicles, interviews, and essays on popular culture, rock music, literature, and social phenomena, with a style that reflects her interests in the dark, the marginal, and the countercultural. She has collaborated with various publications such as Rolling Stone Argentina, Anfibia, TXT, La Mano, and El Guardián, as well as argentine Radio Nacional. She has compiled part of her journalistic and essayistic work in the volume El otro lado. Retratos, fetichismos, confesiones.

Early life

Enríquez was born in 1973 in Buenos Aires, and grew up in Valentín Alsina, a suburb in the Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area. Parts of her family hail from North-Eastern Argentina, Paraguay, and Galicia. Enríquez would later move alongside her family to La Plata, where she became part of the local literary and punk scenes. This would inspire her to study journalism with a focus on rock music.

Career

Mariana Enríquez holds a degree in Journalism and Social Communication from the National University of La Plata. She is a journalist and the deputy editor of the Arts and Culture section of Página 12, and she teaches at literature workshops.
Enríquez has published four novels, including: Bajar es lo peor, Cómo desaparecer completamente and Nuestra parte de noche and Éste es el mar. She is also the author of two short story collections, Los peligros de fumar en la cama and Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego, and the novelette Chicos que vuelven. Her stories have appeared in anthologies of Spain, Mexico, Chile, Bolivia and Germany.
In 2017, Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego was translated into English by Megan McDowell, and published as Things We Lost in the Fire by Portobello Books in the U.K. and Hogarth in the U.S. McDowell also translated the earlier Los peligros as The Dangers of Smoking in Bed in 2021.
In 2019, she won the Premio Herralde for her fourth novel, Nuestra parte de noche. In 2024 she won the Platinum Konex Award for her work in the last decade in Argentina.
In June 2025, Netflix announced a miniseries in production based on Enríquez's short stories, to be titled My Sad Dead and directed by Pablo Larraín.

Personal life

Mariana Enríquez is married to Paul, who is originally from Western Australia. They met while Paul was on a six-year journey cycling around the world to raise awareness of the debt crisis in the global south. The couple married under a concrete highway overpass in Buenos Aires.
In 2025, Paul and Enríquez relocated to Launceston, Tasmania.

Novels

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Short fiction

;Collections
;Novelettes
;Short stories
TitleYearFirst publishedReprinted/collectedNotes
The intoxicated years2015Things we lost in the fireTranslated by Megan McDowell
Spiderweb2016Things we lost in the fire
The well2019The dangers of smoking in bedTranslated by Megan McDowell
Our Lady of the Quarry2020The dangers of smoking in bed
My sad dead2023

Non-fiction

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;Bibliography notes