3 best books by Elisa Beni

The circumstances are what they are and ungrateful is the one who does not take advantage of them. Among the host of gifted writers, fortune makes the difference. Elisa beni Today she is a writer with that star as a derivative of her popularity and her journalistic side. Hardly anyone remembers that first and controversial book about Judge Bermúdez. Undoubtedly because the following works took that ahead, an unequivocal sign that there was writing wood taking advantage of the opportunity.

Ignoring some new non-fiction incursion into the space of justice in Spain, Elisa Beni is expanding her bibliography between plots of black gender or historical fictions with that touch of necessary feminine revisionism in search of protagonists, of them also transforming the world in its sociological evolution, of course.

Here we are going to stop only on the purely novelistic facet, on those works by Elisa Beni brought from fiction to guide us by an imaginary where female protagonism is a constant. Under this premise, we enter a creepy criminal literature without fuss or we go back to the first twentieth century where we discover mirrors of our current world ...

Top 3 recommended novels by Elisa Beni

Step on my heart

French folk wisdom defines as petite death at the end of orgasm. Sex, passion, life and even death. Filias that approach the other pole of phobias where everything can happen if one gets carried away by their demons ...

The shadows turn hauntingly black, as women dominate and men are subdued. In the cold Madrid winter, a woman leaves the apartment where she has just murdered a powerful businessman during a session of extreme sadomasochism.

Leo, a promising young architect; Claudia, a beautiful and expert dominatrix and the inspector and psychologist Carracedo, from the Central Criminal Intelligence Unit, will be involved in a dizzying plot of murders, latex, lust and high heels that will bring to light the deepest and most hidden secrets of the protagonists.

In her new novel, Elisa Beni drags us into a pulsating choral thriller in which we will see how the apparent reversal of the traditional terms of power is nothing more than a diabolical twist in which the subjugated forces the dominant to enter its spiral of excess and transgression. Does sex dissolve the limits of consciousness?

Freedom toll

Exercising the Spanish John Grisham and adding a feminist vindictive touch, Elisa Beni brings us closer to a plot about the human part of judicial performance. The judiciary, like everything else, has its things ... And beyond the rigor and application of the laws, the dark interstices through which interests and yearnings for power filter can come to create giant cracks that threaten the firmness of the shaft of Justice.

Transgressive and ultra-sophisticated, Judge Gabriela Aldama is a rare sight in the Castilla Square Courts. Coming from a wealthy Madrid family, Gabriela stands out among her colleagues for her independence and for doing things her way, precisely the same reasons that have made her one of the most unclassifiable and envied members of the judicial class.

Always in the spotlight and constantly criticized, the judge faces one of the most complicated cases of her career: the murder of an unknown couple. During the investigation, Gaby will have to expose herself to the limit… and not only professionally… A thriller Unusual for its capacity for provocation and that renews some of the keys of the genre.

Freedom toll

 A woman never dies

There is certainly some immortality in the matriarchy of almost every home. The one with which, since time immemorial, women have been able to survive other types of dominant patriarchies in society. This is how you can understand that immortality made wisdom transmitted to each new generation of women. An indelible mark, an unfading memory in gestures and advice to always get ahead.

What powerful threads can link an anonymous postwar woman with a newly divorced young journalist from the XNUMXst century? This is the story of two women or maybe all women. Elisa Beni's new novel takes us to post-war Franco's Madrid in a story full of secrets that vindicates the role of women in the most recent and turbulent time in the history of Spain.

Lara, from a frenzied and pre-pandemic Madrid, sets out in search of explanations about the life of the woman who died in the apartment she just rented and who was found mummified ten years later. Looking for an explanation to this life so seemingly full of loneliness, he is probably looking for the keys to his own future. In this path of retrospective research, which is almost bordering on obsession, she will discover the deep current that unites the destiny of women of all times.

This novel is a fresco of the unresolved role of female voices in society and a tribute to all those lives that the Franco regime made pass in a black and white background. Women who are still alive in their daughters and granddaughters because a woman never dies.

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