Since no single famous work is titled Jackandjill Valeria , I will assume you are referring to in her novels Faces in the Crowd (2011) or Lost Children Archive (2019). In both, Luiselli uses children’s rhymes and paired characters to explore memory, displacement, and the collapse of narrative.
The deep truth of “Jack and Jill” in Valeria Luiselli’s universe is this: the hill is endless, the bucket is broken, and the only redemption is to fall in the same direction.
The most radical reinterpretation in Luiselli’s work is the hill itself. In “Jack and Jill,” the hill is a neutral geographic feature. In Luiselli’s America, the hill is —specifically, the stretch near Nogales where walls descend into ravines. Climbing that hill is not a child’s errand; it is a life-or-death crossing. The bucket of water is a canteen. The fall is a broken ankle, a shot by a drone, a disappearance into the scrub.
Drainage Stoke