Austral
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- £5.99
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- £5.99
Publisher Description
"A tender and thoughtful exploration of the painful irony of being alive and our attempts to make sense of the past as well as the present" KATHARINA VOLCKMER, author of The Appointment
"A reflection on identity, rootlessness and violence - Fonseca's most ambitious, most complex and most accomplished novel to date" JAVIER CERCAS, author of Soldiers of Salamis
"A beautifully knotted novel which unfolds with every traced layer of its deeply affecting narrative alongside a meditation on memory, mystery and vanishing. Sebaldian in its turns, Austral is a novel of profound questions" GUY GUNARATNE, author of Mister, Mister
A dazzling novel about the traces we leave, the traces we erase and the traces we seek to rebuild.
In this innovative novel three losses and three quests are pursued. English writer Aliza Abravanel tries, in a battle with aphasia, to finish her book. A last indigenous speaker is confronted with the fading of his culture and language while an anthropologist struggles to prevent it. And through the construction of an esoteric theatre of memory, a survivor of the Guatemalan genocide of the 1970s and '80s seeks to recover the memories lost after the traumas of war. And behind these three threads lies the narrator's own story: Julio, a disillusioned university professor, must try to understand and complete his friend Aliza's novel, and come to terms with a past he shared with her but has blanked for thirty years.
From the Guatemalan wilderness to the high Peruvian Amazon, passing through Nueva Germania, the anti-Semitic commune founded in Paraguay by Nietzsche's sister, Austral takes us on a long journey south, following a trail of ecological and cultural destruction to excavate contemporary xenophobia.
"Reminiscent of the best of Bolaño, Borges and Calvino" Guardian
Translated from the Spanish by Megan McDowell
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Fonseca (Natural History) explores art, violence, and madness in his stunning latest. After celebrated author Alicia Abravanel dies before finishing her final novel, her old friend Julio Gamboa receives a letter expressing Alicia's wishes that he edit the work. Upon arriving in Humahuaca, Argentina, where Alicia chose to spend her last days, Julio's given the sprawling manuscript of A Private Language, which takes the form of a journal based on diaries from Alicia's father, Yitzhak Abravanel. In it, Alicia describes his experiences in a Swiss sanitorium, where he listened to a renowned anthropologist recount his travels to Paraguay in the 1960s to write about the failed Aryan colony of New Germany, which was founded in 1886 by Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche. As Julio burrows into Alicia's recollections, his own past mistakes come to the surface. Unspooling the story across multiple timelines and places, Fonseca brilliantly interrogates the notion that, as Yitzhak states in his journal, "Repeating the past is a way of doing it justice." This is an evocative excavation of memory, loss, and legacy.