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Into the Sun (Paperback)
Deni Ellis Bechard
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R492
R425
Discovery Miles 4 250
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In this, his fourth work of fiction, Bechard takes readers from
nineteenth-century Prince Edward Island to modern-day Iraq, tracing
the story of a North American family that is at once singular and
emblematic, and exploring the cultural repercussions of war and
violence. Reinventing themselves in often unexpected ways, the
characters in this tapestry defy simplification. A pair of
half-brothers come together and drift apart, one passive and
risk-averse, the other driven by a passionate desire to understand
their reclusive father. A student of Mesopotamian archaeology
encounters a young Iraqi man and soon finds himself in Kurdistan,
researching stolen artifacts along with mysteries in his father's
past. An Irish-Acadian soldier carries his fiddle and folk song
across the battlefields of the First World War. An
orphan-turned-assassin pursues his target across the deserts of
Mexico and Texas, using a novel as evidence for his location.
Growing together and then apart, these and others chase their
dreams and run from their nightmares, hungry for life and longing
for purpose. Animated throughout by a striking beauty and ferocity,
A Song from Faraway pieces together "stories we tell about
ourselves," illuminating the human condition and our times.
From the celebrated author of the "ferociously intelligent and
intensely gripping" (Phil Klay) Into the Sun comes a subversive,
daring, and at times satirical novel exploring privilege,
humanitarianism, white supremacy, and the absurdity of American
exceptionalism. Assigned to write an expose on Richmond Hew, one of
the most elusive and corrupt figures in the conservation world, a
journalist finds himself on a plane to the Congo, a country he
thinks he understands. But when he meets Sola, a woman searching
for a rootless white orphan girl who believes herself possessed by
a skin-stealing demon, he slowly uncovers a tapestry of corruption
and racial tensions generations in the making. This harrowing
search leads him into an underground network of sinners and
saints-and straight to the heart of his own complicity. An
anthropologist who treats orphans like test subjects. A community
of charismatic Congolese preachers. Street children who share
accounts of abandonment and sexual abuse. A renowned and revered
conservationist who vanishes. And then there is the journalist
himself, lost in his own misunderstanding of privilege and the myth
of whiteness, and plagued by traumatic memories of his father. At
first seemingly unrelated, these disparate elements coalesce one by
one into a map of Richmond Hew's movements.
When acclaimed author Deni Bechard first learned of the last living
bonobos--matriarchal great apes that are, alongside the chimpanzee,
our closest relatives in the animal kingdom--he was completely
astonished. How could the world possibly accept the extinction of
this majestic species? Bechard discovered one relatively small NGO,
the Bonobo Conservation Initiative (BCI), which has done more to
save bonobos than many far larger organizations. Based on the
author's extensive travels in the Congo and Rwanda, this book
explores BCI's success, offering a powerful, truly postcolonial
model of conservation. In contrast to other traditional
conservation groups Bechard finds, BCI works closely with Congolese
communities, addressing the underlying problems of poverty and
unemployment, which lead to the hunting of bonobos. By creating
jobs and building schools, they gradually change the conditions
that lead to the eradication of the bonobos. This struggle is far
from easy. Devastated by the worst military conflict since World
War II, the Congo and its forests continue to be destroyed by
aggressive logging and mining. Bechard's fascinating and moving
account-filled with portraits of the extraordinary individuals and
communities who make it all happen offers a rich example of how
international conservation must be reinvented before it's too late.
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