Recensione:
Short-listed for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize
An O Magazine Summer Reading Pick
"Funny, wistful, and wise . . . [Kamchatka] suggests that our stories do not end, that heroism lies in one's ability to change, and that we all need a place where we can retreat to before we can learn to face the world again." Tiffany Sun, O Magazine
[A] generous, affecting novel.” The New Yorker
Subtle . . . Brilliantly observed, heartrending.” Financial Times
[Figueras] vividly evokes a child's reaction to a world beleaguered by violence. . . . [A] hopeful message about the healing powers of imagination and love.” The New York Times
Haunting . . . Warmhearted . . . [Kamchatka] unfolds with disarming simplicity. . . . Bursting with good humor, with a bittersweet, melancholy shadow, Figueras's superb novel amply illustrates that laughing and crying at the same time is something life teaches you without you even noticing.’” Shelf Awareness
Interesting and insightful . . . Engrossing, often funny, and very, very unsettling.” The Brooklyn Rail
Kamchatka is not a nostalgic book. Its narration is unconstrained and light, entwining and sympathetic. . . . Read it, and buy yourself a board game of Risk.” Bookslut
Stark and immediate, more moving because it is presented without sentimentality . . . [Written] with wry comedy . . . the tenderness breaks your heart.” Booklist
A masterpiece . . . Written in beautiful prose.” De Telegraaf (Netherlands)
Interesting and insightful . . . Engrossing, often funny, and very, very unsettling.” The Brooklyn Rail
Figueras writes with power and insight about the ways in which a child uses imagination to make sense of terrifying and baffling reality.” The Times (UK)
Tender, severe, moving, elegiac.” El País (Spain)
Brilliant.” The Independent
Like Carlos Eire’s wonderfully buoyant memoir of pre-revolutionary Cuba, Waiting for Snow in Havana, Figueras chooses to capture the drumbeat of history in the small, offbeat details of a boy’s life. . . . Tinged with a doomed innocence that comes shining through Figueras’s irrepressible telling . . . Kamchatka is a colorful, unforgettable vision of a boy’s and nation’s attempt to make sense of a descent into darkness and chaos. It is also a moving attempt to recapture the memory of the disappeared’ a trick of fate that allows loved ones to re-appear by writing about them.” Words Without Borders Magazine
Kamchatka is a superb novel that refracts public, political events through the sensibilities of everyday life. . . . Balances adult understanding and a child’s interests and anxieties. The language mediates between the two. Think not Melville, but the Mark Twain of Huckleberry Finn, yet starring a Huckleberry Finn who has read Melville. . . . Kamchatka came to me by chance. Don’t trust to such luck. Seek it out.” J. Kates. The Arts Fuse (blog)
This powerful novel brings to life the atmosphere of desperation following Argentina’s military coup of 1976. . . . A richly drawn, moving and memorable novel, a fine tribute to los desaparecidos,’ Argentina’s disappeared’” Irish Examiner
Figueras’s view of military dictatorship strikes a note that lingers for weeks.” Frankfurter Rundschau (Germany)
L'autore:
Born in 1962 in Buenos Aires, Marcelo Figueras is an award-winning journalist, screenwriter, and novelist. He has also been a war correspondent and singer. Figueras makes daily contributions to the Spanish-language literary blog El Boomeran: www.elboomeran.com. His books have previously been translated into French, German, Dutch, Polish and Russian; This is his first novel to be published in English.
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