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An Orphan World (Paperback)
Giuseppe Caputo; Translated by Sophie Hughes, Juana Adcock
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R303
R244
Discovery Miles 2 440
Save R59 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In a poverty-stricken neighbourhood wedged between the city and the
sea, a father and son struggle to keep their heads above water.
Rather than being discouraged by their difficulties and hardship,
their response is to come up with increasingly bizarre and
imaginative plans in order to get by. Even when a horrifying,
macabre event rocks the neighborhood and the locals start to flee,
father and son decide to stay put. What matters is staying
together.This is a bold, poignant text that juxtaposes a very
tender father-son relationship with the son's sexual liberation and
a brutal depiction of homophobic violence. Giuseppe Caputo uses
delicate - yet electrifying - lyricism and imagery to weave a tale
that balances desire, violence, discrimination, love, eroticism and
defiance, while evoking with surreal humor the social
marginalization of the protagonists as they struggle to keep afloat
in a society where there are no safety nets.Like a brightly-lit
theme park with its house of horrors, reminiscent in parts of James
Baldwin's Another Country or Virginie Despentes' Vernon Subutex
trilogy, An Orphan World defies the reader to look away, and the
reward is an exhilarating carnival ride filled with beauty,
compassion and loss.
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First Rain (Paperback)
Hubert Matiuwaa; Translated by Juana Adcock
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R151
Discovery Miles 1 510
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Written originally in Me'phaa, First Rain is a selection of poems
that emerged from the poet responding to the death of his
grandmother who declared to him in 2005: I will die in the days
when the first rains come. The work mourns both the loss of a
grandmother, and the fading away (like her sight in later life) of
a culture and language that hold so much history and pride. In this
way, they address social, racial and gender inequalities,
environmental abuses and injustices faced by native peoples in
Latin America - issues that have resonance globally. As the poet
recounts: In the face of the wind, grab the stones that are falling
upon us, one of his grandmother's phrases, refers to people
standing up to injustice. This collection, Hubert Matiuwaa's first
ever in English, is a gathering of stones.
Latin America is known to be producing some of the most exciting
literature in the world today. With the region's rich intersecting
traditions, history of migrations, political movements, and
commitment to poetic innovation, the women poets who are currently
working there are some of the fiercest and most creative voices in
the 21st century. Temporary Archives brings together 24 of the most
widely-read women poets working in Spanish, Portuguese and
indigenous languages throughout the Latin American continent, who
are in dialogue with each other, their traditions, and with the
current literatures and political movements in the region. With a
vibrant women's movement gaining increasing traction in countries
such as Chile, Argentina and Mexico, this anthology is a timely
contribution to the works currently being published in English
translation.
Un Nuevo Sol: British LatinX Writers is the first major anthology
of UK-based writers of Latin American heritage, a vibrant, new
vanguard in British literature. Representing a community that is
the eighth biggest in London, one of the fastest growing and best
educated, numbering over 200,000 nationally, the work featured here
includes fiction, poetry and theatre that exhibits the stunning
fluidity with which the writers inhabit their hybrid heritage. Of
the ten writers assembled here, some were born in Latin America and
came to the UK in their twenties, others are second generation and
have a British parent, but their work shares a fierceness, a
playfulness with language and a sly political edge. Playing with
form, genre, silence and coding, the resulting work channels and
celebrates the rich mythology and scope of Latin American
literature, but carries a uniquely British gene - a bit of banter,
a flash of restrained cheek. It is no accident that some of the
contributors are published and have growing international
reputations - for example, Brazilian-British novelist Luiza Sauma
(Penguin/Viking) and prize-winning Argentinian-British poet Leo
Boix (Chatto). The book also includes an interview with the
writer-actress Gael Le Cornec, exploring issues of identity,
multiple heritage and displacement.
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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