
“The landscape we live in is falling apart; what we once loved is vanishing. Tomorrow seems to us an obsolete discourse, a privilege of past decades”
Title: Chilco
Author: Daniela Catrileo
Translator: Jacob Edelstein
Pages: 272
Release: July 15, 2025
An evocative meditation on colonialism, dispossession, and identity. Chilco unfolds in a city literally falling apart, while Mari’s collapse is more internal – she is caught between cultures, histories, and her own fractured sense of belonging. She grapples with the tension between rootedness and displacement, both within herself and those close to her. What is worth clinging to, and what can be left behind?
Catrileo’s writing is tender and quite lovely – more a breeze than a gale force wind. Subtle yet deeply moving. The book’s nonlinear structure feels unnecessary, but it did not diminish the power of its themes.
Before reading this, I knew little of Chilean history or the oral tradition of the Mapuche people. Chilco served as a compelling introduction, sparking my interest for further exploration.
★★★¾
My thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.








