She has written short stories, flash fiction, and novels in which the relationships between women are front and center. In addition, female homosexuality is the central theme of her works, some of which have been included in book recommendation lists[2][3] and reviewed by specialized websites.[4] Her anthology Y abrazarte was a finalist in the 2017 edition of the Guillermo de Baskerville Awards, by literary magazine Libros Prohibidos.[5][6]
Among her novels, some of the titles that stand out include the series starring police detective Catherine S. Maynes.[7] This character, according to literary historian Inmaculada Pertusa, represented a revival of the lesbian detective novel in Spain, since apart from the elements inherent to noir fiction, it includes others belonging to romance and erotic fiction as well, to the point of explicitly depicting lesbian erotic scenes with its protagonist.[8][9]
Pertusa further adds that Asunción García is part of a generation of writers (along with Isabel Franc and Susana Hernández) who were influenced by the works of Jean M. Redmann, and who are pioneers in developing the theme of lesbianism in crime fiction—in García's case, with a marked erotic tone.[10]
She has participated in events for the defense of the rights of LGBTQ+ people: giving talks at Pride events[11] and taking part in the LGTBQ Book Fair in Chueca.[12] She writes articles for websites that specialize in lesbian issues, such as Hay una lesbiana en mi sopa.[a][13]
According to Professor Diana Aramburu, in the late 20th century there was a boom in detective fiction, which was once a male-only genre, "producing female detectives that continue to break with traditional stereotypes and captivate a crime fiction-hungry audience." This literary phenomenon has come to be known as "femicrime [es]",[b] in which "a female detective is used to examine the socioeconomic crisis, crime, violence, and/or issues of identity and gender from a woman’s perspective."[17] The genre has now become firmly established in the literary market in Spain. It dates back to 1979, with the first female hard-boiled detective, Bárbara Arenas, as written by Lourdes Ortiz in Picadura mortal. Along with Ortiz and Asunción García (with her Cate Maynes character), Aramburu also lists other authors who have created female detective characters, such as: Maria Antònia Oliver Cabrer (with the first serial woman detective in the Lònia Guiu series of novels), Alicia Giménez Bartlett (with her Petra Delicado [es] series), Rosa Ribas Moliné [es] (with Cornelia Weber-Tejedor), Carolina Solé (with Kate Salas), Cristina Fallarás (with Vicky González), Maruja Torres (with Diana Dial), Berna González Harbour [es] (with María Ruiz), Dolores Redondo (with Amaia Salazar), Susana Hernández (with Rebeca Santana and Miriam Vázquez), and Isabel Franc (writing as Lola Van Guardia), who created Emma García, the first lesbian detective.[14][18]
List of works
Short stories and anthologies
Short story Las cosas que hacen clinc pop, in the anthology Cada día me gustas más (CreateSpace, 2016, ISBN9781540804501)
Short story collection Y abrazarte. Antología de relatos con esa cosa llamada amor dando la tabarra. (CreateSpace, 2016, ISBN9781540574572); finalist in the 2017 edition of the Guillermo de Baskerville Awards, by literary magazine Libros Prohibidos[5]
Short story ¿Te lo puedes creer?, in the anthology Donde no puedas amar, no te demores (Editorial Egales, 2016, ISBN9788416491728; prologue by Josa Fructuoso [es]
Short story collection Sexo, alcohol paracetamol y una imbécil: Colección de relatos de la detective privada Cate Maynes (CreateSpace, 2015, ISBN9781519508768); stories starring the character of detective Cate Maynes[20]
Short story Un perro llamado Úrsula in the anthology Fundido en negro: antología de relatos del mejor calibre criminal femenino (Alrevés Editorial, 2014, ISBN978-84-15900-50-4); story set in the Cate Maynes universe;[21] edited by Inmaculada Pertusa
Elisa frente al mar (CreateSpace, 2013, ISBN978-1495951343; translated into French as Face à la mer (Éditions dans l'Engrenage, 2015, ISBN978-2915342383), and English as Elisa facing the sea (CreateSpace, 2016, ISBN978-1522898689)
^The term comes from the Danish term femikrimi, which became popular in Denmark during the decade of the 2000s when there was a boom in female crime fiction. Frank Egholm Andersen has extensively studied the particularities of the Nordic phenomenon in Den nordiske femikrimi.[14][15][16]
^García, Daniel (1 July 2014). "Feria del Libro LGTBQ en Madrid" [LGTBQ Book Fair in Madrid]. Universo Gay (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 8 March 2018. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
^"Clara Asunción García". Hay una lesbiana en mi sopa (in Spanish). 28 June 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
Pertusa, Inmaculada (2014). "7. Nuevas detectives lesbianas para un nuevo milenio" [New lesbian detectives for a new millennium]. In Fernández-Ulloa, Teresa (ed.). Otherness in Hispanic Culture (in Spanish). Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 105–121. ISBN978-1-4438-5389-7.
Pertusa, Inmaculada (2015). "5. Del negro al rojo: la erotización de la novela detectivesca lesbiana (española) en "El primer caso de Cate Maynes" de Clara Asunción García" [5. From black to red: the eroticization of the (Spanish) lesbian detective novel in Clara Asunción García's "El primer caso de Cate Maynes"]. In Losada Soler, Elena; Paszkiewicz, Katarzyna (eds.). Tras la pista. Narrativa criminal escrita por mujeres [On the trail. Crime narrative written by women.] (in Spanish). Barcelona: Icaria Editorial. pp. 97–112. ISBN9788498886566.