
As Flies To Whatless Boys
---Edwidge Danticat, author of "Claire of the Sea Light"
""As Flies to Whatless Boys" is a brilliant novel that is rivetingly localized in a distant time and an untouched place, and yet somehow speaks vibrantly to this present age and to the universal human condition. Robert Antoni is a treasure of our literary culture."
--Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of "A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain"
"Robert Antoni doesn't make giant steps. He makes quantum leaps past whatever we called metafiction to the same territory as Richard Powers and David Foster Wallace. But like those men and unlike nearly everybody else, he never forgets that at the core of it all you've still got to tell a rip-roaring story."
--Marlon James, author of "The Book of Night Women"
"Like the preserved hummingbirds at its center, this novel is a tender and strange object, referencing something no longer with us, but maintained in its beauty as art."
--Tiphanie Yanique, author of "How to Escape from a Leper Colony"
"Robert Antoni is one of the great comic writers of the New World--that sweaty, sun-blasted, eternally baroque, dystopia where our tears, issued from laughter or sorrow or more often both, have the potency of overproof rum. "As Flies to Whatless Boys" is a mishmash merriment of an adventure story, an island of luscious prose in a sea of delight."
--Bob Shacochis, author of "The Woman Who Lost Her Soul"
"Antoni is an audacious storyteller, mining his very own language and ways of telling from the linguistic cornucopia of Trinidad. His story is moving and is also hilarious."
--Lawrence Scott, author of "Light Falling on Bamboo"
In 1845 London, an engineer, philosopher, philanthropist, and bold-faced charlatan, John Adolphus Etzler, has invented machines that he thinks will transform the division of labor and free all men. He forms a collective called the Tropical Emigration Society (TES), and recruits a variety of London citizens to take his machines and his misguided ideas to form a proto-socialist, utopian community in the British colony of Trinidad.
Among his recruits is a young boy (and the book's narrator) named Willy, who falls head-over-heels for the enthralling and wise Marguerite Whitechurch. Coming from the gentry, Marguerite is a world away from Willy's laboring class. As the voyage continues, and their love for one another strengthens, Willy and Marguerite prove themselves to be true socialists, their actions and adventures standing in stark contrast to Etzler's disconnected theories.
Robert Antoni's tragic historical novel, accented with West Indian cadence and captivating humor, provides an unforgettable glimpse into nineteenth-century Trinidad & Tobago.
- Undertittel
- A Novel
- Forfatter
- Antoni Robert
- ISBN
- 9781617751561
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Vekt
- 441 gram
- Utgivelsesdato
- 10.10.2013
- Forlag
- Akashic Books,U.S.
- Antall sider
- 336
