Nefando
A techno-horror portrait of the fears and desires of six young artists whose lives are upended by a controversial video game, from National Book Award finalist Mónica Ojeda.

Six young artists share an apartment in Barcelona: Kiki Ortega, a researcher writing a pornographic novel; Iván Herrera, a writer whose prose reveals a deeply conflicted relationship with his body; three siblings, Irene, Emilio, and Cecilia, who quietly search for ways to transcend their abuse as children; and El Cuco Martínez, a video-game designer whose creations push beneath the substrate of the digital world. All of them are connected in different ways to Nefando, a controversial cult video game whose purpose remains a mystery. In the parallel reality of the game, players found relief from the pain of past trauma and present shame, but also a frighteningly elastic sense of self and ethics. Is Nefando a game for horror enthusiasts, a challenge to players' morals, or a poetic exercise? What happens in a virtual world that admits every taboo?

Unsparing, addictive, and perverse, Nefando takes us to the darkest corners of the web, revealing the inevitable entanglement of digital and physical worlds, and of technology and horror.
1126239089
Nefando
A techno-horror portrait of the fears and desires of six young artists whose lives are upended by a controversial video game, from National Book Award finalist Mónica Ojeda.

Six young artists share an apartment in Barcelona: Kiki Ortega, a researcher writing a pornographic novel; Iván Herrera, a writer whose prose reveals a deeply conflicted relationship with his body; three siblings, Irene, Emilio, and Cecilia, who quietly search for ways to transcend their abuse as children; and El Cuco Martínez, a video-game designer whose creations push beneath the substrate of the digital world. All of them are connected in different ways to Nefando, a controversial cult video game whose purpose remains a mystery. In the parallel reality of the game, players found relief from the pain of past trauma and present shame, but also a frighteningly elastic sense of self and ethics. Is Nefando a game for horror enthusiasts, a challenge to players' morals, or a poetic exercise? What happens in a virtual world that admits every taboo?

Unsparing, addictive, and perverse, Nefando takes us to the darkest corners of the web, revealing the inevitable entanglement of digital and physical worlds, and of technology and horror.
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Nefando

Nefando

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

Nefando

Nefando

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

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Overview

A techno-horror portrait of the fears and desires of six young artists whose lives are upended by a controversial video game, from National Book Award finalist Mónica Ojeda.

Six young artists share an apartment in Barcelona: Kiki Ortega, a researcher writing a pornographic novel; Iván Herrera, a writer whose prose reveals a deeply conflicted relationship with his body; three siblings, Irene, Emilio, and Cecilia, who quietly search for ways to transcend their abuse as children; and El Cuco Martínez, a video-game designer whose creations push beneath the substrate of the digital world. All of them are connected in different ways to Nefando, a controversial cult video game whose purpose remains a mystery. In the parallel reality of the game, players found relief from the pain of past trauma and present shame, but also a frighteningly elastic sense of self and ethics. Is Nefando a game for horror enthusiasts, a challenge to players' morals, or a poetic exercise? What happens in a virtual world that admits every taboo?

Unsparing, addictive, and perverse, Nefando takes us to the darkest corners of the web, revealing the inevitable entanglement of digital and physical worlds, and of technology and horror.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Praise for Nefando

A Document Top Read of 2024
A BOMB Magazine Editor’s Choice
A Southwest Review Must-Read Book of 2023

"Cerebral, sensual and unapologetically scatological, this techno-horror tale is obsessed with ‘the internal conflict between man and beast, intellect and instinct, life and death.’” —Gabriel Iglesias, The New York Times

"Ojeda makes a convincing case that it’s not the machines that created the nightmares, but the humans. When we open our laptops, when we stare into our little screens, all that monstrousness we unconsciously fear about ourselves, words and images we worry will remain forever uploaded—all that human terror—looks back at us." —Rhian Sasseen, BOMB Magazine

Nefando deserves attention for not only the polished craft of Booker and Ojeda, but its insistence on staring directly at genuine horrors—both online and in the real world—and unflinchingly asking why, if we won't tolerate these problems in one space, we allow them to be perpetuated in the other.” —Cory Oldweiler, The Star Tribune

"Ojeda’s work bubbles from this need to write the unspeakable—to write not just of horror, but of the moments of desire, pleasure, or love that might lie within it.” —Anna Learn, Full Stop

"Nefando isn’t for the faint of heart. It confronts the evil, unspeakable aspects of human nature, refusing to turn away its lucid, dissecting gaze.” —Sébastien Luc Butler, Foreword Reviews

“Like the fictitious Nefando itself, this is a work for voyeurs, searchers, escapists, doomscrollers. At times I feared this book yet I couldn't put it down. At some point you sense it coming to life. And what began as recreation quickly turns to compulsion. Even at the final page you fear the book will go on without you.” —Daniel Peña

“In Nefando, Mónica Ojeda compels us to bear witness to the most vicious form of sexuality as it intersects with the perversion of family and the trauma of a broken childhood. The experience of pain goes beyond what can be said, but Ojeda persists in naming it with language as poetic as it is crude. This choral, fragmented novel masterfully reveals and weaves together the darkness of our time.” —Gabriela Ponce

Kirkus Reviews

2023-08-26
Six young people living together in Barcelona collaborate on a multimedia experience that messes with everybody’s heads.

If one of the points of transgressive fiction is to trespass on the reader’s psyche, often to the point of revulsion, Ojeda's novel is certainly a memorable example of the genre. This phantasmagoric mélange of technology, psychological distress, and body horror is a linguistic marvel and a perpetual engine for the heebie-jeebies. It’s an oral history, of sorts, recounting the strange origins of a legendary game that appeared and disappeared on the dark web so quickly that information about it is nearly vaporous. The author’s interest in the online horror phenomenon known as creepypasta is clearly at play here. Six starving artists are living together in a flat in Barcelona when their disparate obsessions begin to commingle. Kiki Ortega, 23, is easily the moodiest and most confrontational, a student writing a pornographic novel about three adolescents that appears in large excerpts throughout the narrative. Iván Herrera is a writer infusing his art with his own body dysmorphia. El Cuco Martínez is the videogame designer born from Europe’s demoscene who makes the titular game possible. Finally, there are the Terán siblings, Irene, Emilio and Cecilia, who populate the game­—based on the mythology of the Backrooms and their disquieting use of liminal spaces—with their own horrific history of childhood abuse. “It was a space for personal exploration,” explains Iván. “You could think differently while playing. The Teráns designed it so that the player’s experience was a poem.” Intensely intellectual, horrific, and disturbing, this tiny nightmare is one of those peek-between-your-fingers pleasures if you're into this sort of thing. As El Cuco reflects, “I suppose we’re all attracted to what disgusts us and want to scare ourselves, even though we don’t like to admit that fear is pleasurable.”

A disturbing novel that endorses darkness, suffering, and pain as means to a higher truth.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940192225660
Publisher: Storyside
Publication date: 06/18/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
Language: Spanish
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