Miguel Ángel Hernández in Conversation with Tope Folarin

  • April 22, 2026

The author of The Pain of Others comes to DC on Sun., Apr. 26th, at 5 p.m.!

Miguel Ángel Hernández in Conversation with Tope Folarin

On Christmas Eve 1995, Miguel Ángel Hernández’s best friend murdered his sister and took his own life by jumping off a cliff. It happened in a small hamlet in the Murcia countryside. No one ever knew why. The investigation was closed, and the crime forgotten.

Twenty years later, when the wounds seem to have stopped bleeding and the mourning died down, Miguel decides to return to the countryside and, putting himself in the shoes of a detective, tries to reconstruct that tragic night that marked the end of his adolescence. But traveling in time always means altering the past, and the investigation will awaken ghosts that he thought he had left behind: a childhood marked by the church, by sin and guilt; the constant presence of illness and death; the oppressive, closed world from which he managed to escape.

The Pain of Others, a raw, moving novel about the collision of two worlds and two ways of life, is a reckoning with the past and, above all, a subtle and incisive meditation on the ethics of literature, which makes us aware that “writing isn’t always a triumph, that sometimes, we too may founder upon the pain of others.”

Miguel Ángel Hernández is a Spanish writer best known for his works of fiction, among them the novels Intento de escapada (2013), which won the Premio Ciudad Alcalá de Narrativa and was translated into five languages, El instante de peligro (2015), which was a finalist for the Premio Herralde de Novela, and El dolor de los demás (2018), which was selected as a book of the year by El País and the New York Times en Español. Hernández teaches art history at the University of Murcia and has authored several books on art and visual culture. His novel Anoxia was published by Other Press in 2025.

Ángel Hernández will be in conversation with Tope Folarin, a Nigerian-American writer based in Washington, DC. He serves as director of the Institute for Policy Studies and the Lannan Visiting Lecturer in Creative Writing at Georgetown University. He is the recipient of the Caine Prize for African Writing, the Whiting Award for Fiction, and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, among other awards.

This event is free with first-come, first-serve seating.

Hosted by Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave., NW, Washington, DC. Learn more here.

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