Item added to cart
From the author ofDeath and the Maidenand other works that explore relations of power in the postcolonial world comes the story of a man whose distant past comes to haunt him. Is the sordid story behind human zoos that flourished in Europe in the nineteenth century connected somehow to a boy's life a hundred years later?
On Fitzroy Foster's fourteenth birthday on September 11, 1981, he receives an unexpected and unwelcome gift: when his father snaps his picture with a Polaroid, another person's image appears in the photo. Fitzroy and his childhood sweetheart, Cam, set out on a decade-long journey in search of this stranger's identity—and to reinstate his own—across seas and continents, into the far past and the evil and good that glint in the eyes of the elusive visitor. Seamlessly weaving together fact and fiction,Darwin's Ghosts holds up a different light to Conrad's The horror! The horror! and a different kind of answer to the urgent questions, Who are we? And what can we do about it? The novel is much more than a Kafkaesque meditation. It’s a thriller, mystery, ghost story and sea adventure ... Like early Hemingway, Dorfman’s language is absolutely clear and restrained; like Kafka and Auster, the images are potent yet eerily disembodied. —Andrew Madigan,The Guardian
It is no surprise that a writer with Dorfman’s skill and brilliance would use an act of imagination as a means of inquiry into the very soul of Euro-American culture ... Darwin’s Ghosts is dizzying in the best ways. It is a presence. Open the book and the ghosts manifest. ... A marvel of a novel --Deena Metzger, TIKKUN
“Dorfman’s work is not just about violence, it’s about compassion and redemption, too.” —Los Angeles Review of Books
Ariel Dorfman's place [is] alongside Mario Vargas Llosa and Gabriel GarlC=
Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell