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Kaya Days

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Specificaties

Objectstaat
Nieuw: Een nieuw, ongelezen en ongebruikt boek in perfecte staat waarin geen bladzijden ontbreken of ...
ISBN
9781949641196

Over dit product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Two Lines Press
ISBN-10
1949641198
ISBN-13
9781949641196
eBay Product ID (ePID)
19050423991

Product Key Features

Book Title
Kaya Days
Number of Pages
178 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Coming of Age, Literary, Political
Publication Year
2021
Genre
Fiction
Author
Carl De Souza
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.4 in
Item Weight
4.2 Oz
Item Length
7 in
Item Width
4.5 in

Additional Product Features

LCCN
2021-015291
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "De Souza's prose, which includes significant amounts of Kreol in addition to French, mirrors his protagonist's transformation: his sentences, in Jeffrey Zuckerman's excellent, language-mixing translation, are compelling at the book's start, but become downright hypnotic by its end. Kaya Days is a novella designed to be read in one gulp, and Jeffrey Zuckerman's prose is propulsive enough to make the book nearly impossible to put down." --NPR "Electric...De Souza's unpredictable, propulsive tale is a rip-roaring trip teeming with beauty, anger, possibility, and helplessness." --Publishers Weekly "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A frantic, stream-of-consciousness novel in which a teenager comes of age in the middle of violent upheaval." --Foreword Reviews "De Souza gives us a superb portrait of a town in riot...a mythical journey through a sort of hell." --The Modern Novel "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "De Souza's prose, which includes significant amounts of Kreol in addition to French, mirrors his protagonist's transformation: his sentences, in Jeffrey Zuckerman's excellent, language-mixing translation, are compelling at the book's start, but become downright hypnotic by its end. Kaya Days is a novella designed to be read in one gulp, and Jeffrey Zuckerman's prose is propulsive enough to make the book nearly impossible to put down." --NPR "The rhythm of revolution beats through every sentence of this dazzling novel. In Jeffrey Zuckerman's shimmering translation, the history and cultures of Mauritius form the background, and its sounds and smells the fore, of a rich portrait of a nation in a moment of change. --Noah Mintz, Literary Hub "A work that renders the electric immediacy of sensation with vividness, kinetics, and a musician's aptness for rhythm...De Souza's densely packed novel is a disorienting one, purposefully so. He jars his readers again and again through sudden shifts in character narration, transmogrifying objects and people, and juxtapositions of violence and jubilation." --Laurel Taylor, Asymptote "Electric...De Souza's unpredictable, propulsive tale is a rip-roaring trip teeming with beauty, anger, possibility, and helplessness." --Publishers Weekly "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A frantic, stream-of-consciousness novel in which a teenager comes of age in the middle of violent upheaval." --Foreword Reviews "De Souza gives us a superb portrait of a town in riot...a mythical journey through a sort of hell." --The Modern Novel "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "Electric...De Souza's unpredictable, propulsive tale is a rip-roaring trip teeming with beauty, anger, possibility, and helplessness." --Publishers Weekly "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A frantic, stream-of-consciousness novel in which a teenager comes of age in the middle of violent upheaval." --Foreword Reviews "De Souza gives us a superb portrait of a town in riot...a mythical journey through a sort of hell." --The Modern Novel "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A frantic, stream-of-consciousness novel in which a teenager comes of age in the middle of violent upheaval." --Foreword Reviews "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "Electric...De Souza's unpredictable, propulsive tale is a rip-roaring trip teeming with beauty, anger, possibility, and helplessness." --Publishers Weekly "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "A frantic, stream-of-consciousness novel in which a teenager comes of age in the middle of violent upheaval." --Foreword Reviews "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France), "An electrifying portrait of a tiny island nation on fire." --Kirkus Reviews "I read Kaya Days in a single setting--in between and on flights--and found it to be dreamlike and evocative, a dramatic, rich and potent contribution to the thankfully multiplying literature from and of our oceanic realms. It was such a delightful companion." --Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, author of The Dragonfly Sea "A searing, urgent, far-seeing dispatch that imprints the reality of Mauritius, at odds with its picture-postcard views, on the global consciousness. Carl de Souza is a formidable voice in Mauritian literature; his account is an indictment and a plea for understanding among its communities." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature "Kaya Days strives to recreate not so much a reality as a truth... [Carl de Souza's] fluid yet dense prose conveys, with flecks of poetry, an extraordinary journey of the soul set, over the course of Kaya Days, against a backdrop of upheaval. His characters live through these events and remain themselves, even as they endure the aftershocks of riotous violence. His novel, which has to be read again and again to fully comprehend its scope, is a rock thrown into seemingly calm waters that will make waves for a long time after." --Le Soir (Belgium) "Even more than [Mauritius's] ethnic tensions, which he delineates meticulously, Carl de Souza trains his gaze on the humanity of these beings abandoned by all and guides us deep into a world with no limits left." --L'Express (Mauritius) "Through the lens of femininity and childhood, the story delves in an unprecedented manner into the themes of innocence and cruelty. The striking prose interweaves a frenetic style and a rising, almost-shrill rhythm in a dreamy way. The achingly personal relationships of these stupefying days reveal a deep-rooted perspective of the island's history." --L'Humanité (France) "[Kaya Days] lays bare clashes of communities, brutalities and kindnesses across generations, pleasures and escapes through Carl de Souza's attentive, vivid prose." --Libération (France)
Dewey Decimal
843.92
Synopsis
"Nearly impossible to put down." --NPR In 1999, the Mauritian musician Joseph Réginald Topize, better known as Kaya, was arrested for smoking weed while performing at a concert. Following his death in police custody just days later, the island nation surged with violence in a long-overdue demand for justice from the marginalized populations of the African island off the coast of Madagascar. In Kaya Days, the spirit of the island and its many people--Hindu, Muslim, Chinese, Franco-Mauritian, and Creole--is distilled into a young woman's daylong search through the uproar for her younger brother, who has gone missing. Amid burning cars and buildings, opportunists and revolutionaries, Santee rises into another world, a furious, brilliant one. An exhilarating journey into night from a small Hindu village to the big city, and from innocence into womanhood, Carl de Souza's surreal English-language debut, artfully translated from French by Jeffrey Zuckerman, is an explosion of politics and poetry, a humid dream-world of revolutionary fervor where seemingly anything--everything--is possible., "Nearly impossible to put down." --NPR In 1999, the Mauritian musician Joseph Réginald Topize, better known as Kaya, was arrested for smoking weed while performing at a concert. Following his death in police custody just days later, the island nation surged with violence in a long-overdue demand for justice from the marginalized populations of the African island off the coast of Madagascar. In Kaya Days , the spirit of the island and its many people--Hindu, Muslim, Chinese, Franco-Mauritian, and Creole--is distilled into a young woman's daylong search through the uproar for her younger brother, who has gone missing. Amid burning cars and buildings, opportunists and revolutionaries, Santee rises into another world, a furious, brilliant one. An exhilarating journey into night from a small Hindu village to the big city, and from innocence into womanhood, Carl de Souza's surreal English-language debut, artfully translated from French by Jeffrey Zuckerman, is an explosion of politics and poetry, a humid dream-world of revolutionary fervor where seemingly anything--everything--is possible., A hazy, riotous novel from the Mauritian French-language author Carl de Souza, KAYA DAYS reimagines the 1999 island race riots (which came after the death of a popular seggae singer while in police custody) as an explosive journey to the end of the night, one animated by huge personalities, revolutionary violence, and the beautiful possibility of another world.
LC Classification Number
PQ3989.2.S674J6813

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