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Fred D. Aguiar

    Fred D'Aguiar ist ein gefeierter Dichter, Romanautor und Dramatiker, dessen Werk sich mit den Komplexitäten von Identität, Geschichte und sozialer Gerechtigkeit befasst. Seine Schriften, geprägt von seinem guyanischen Erbe und seinen Erfahrungen zwischen Guyana, London und den Vereinigten Staaten, untersuchen die komplizierten Hinterlassenschaften des Kolonialismus und des transatlantischen Sklavenhandels. Durch lebendige Erzählungen und kraftvolle Verse setzt sich D'Aguiar mit unbequemen Wahrheiten über Vergangenheit und Gegenwart auseinander. Seine literarische Stimme bietet tiefe Einblicke in die menschliche Verfassung und überschreitet geografische und kulturelle Grenzen.

    The Rose of Toulouse
    Year of Plagues
    Letters to America
    Continental Shelf
    Die längste Erinnerung
    Futter für die Geister
    • Continental Shelf

      • 131 Seiten
      • 5 Lesestunden
      4,2(13)Abgeben

      Traces a journey, across continents and from youth to maturity. This book moves from memories of childhood in Guyana, through a long elegiac exploration of the shootings at Virginia Tech University in 2006, to the reflective closing section. It celebrates how imagination and memory enable us to cope with violence and death.

      Continental Shelf
    • Year of Plagues

      • 336 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      3,0(1)Abgeben

      In this piercing and unforgettable memoir, the award-winning poet reflects on a year of turbulence, fear, and hope.

      Year of Plagues
    • The Rose of Toulouse

      • 80 Seiten
      • 3 Lesestunden
      3,8(5)Abgeben

      The Rose of Toulouse is a book of geographies tracing where the poet has lived and taught, their histories, and his history as he travels away from who he was.

      The Rose of Toulouse
    • The youngest child of a Guyanese family is accidently hit on the head with an axe, and sees the world through a strange visionary perspective. While the family plays and squabbles, an election is brewing in the capital which leads to an unexpected act of violence that destroys the family's world.

      Dear Future
    • Translations from Memory

      • 112 Seiten
      • 4 Lesestunden
      3,8(11)Abgeben

      Guyanese-British poet Fred D'Aguiar's poetry has been shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize. His new book wonderfully recreates moments of his and our wider history, making inclusions where exclusions have occurred before.

      Translations from Memory
    • Acclaimed novelist, playwright, and poet Fred D’Aguiar has been short-listed for the T.S. Eliot Prize in poetry for Bill of Rights, his narrative poem about the Jonestown massacre, and won the Whitbread First Novel Award for The Longest Memory. In this beautifully imagined work of literary fiction, he returns to the territory of Jim Jones’s utopian commune, interweaving magical realism and shocking history into a resonant story of love, faith, oppression, and sacrifice in which a mother and daughter attempt to break free with the help of an extraordinary gorilla. Joyce and her young daughter, Trina, are members of a utopian community ruled by a magnetic preacher. When Trina, plays too near to the cage holding the commune’s gorilla, Adam, the ape attacks and kills the child. Or so everyone believes. That night, the preacher dramatically “revives” her—an act that transforms Trina into a symbol of its charismatic leader’s God-like power. Desperate to save her daughter from the preacher’s control, the outspoken Joyce attempts a daring escape, a run for freedom aided by another prisoner—the remarkable Adam. Told with a sweeping perspective in lush prose, shimmering with magic, and devastating in its clarity, Children of Paradise is a brilliant and evocative exploration of oppression—of both mind and body—and of the liberating power of storytelling.

      Children of Paradise
    • Fred D'Aguiar's new collection connects the condition of namelessness of a famous black jockey with a present-day need to give back to those lost souls the dignity of their names.

      For the Unnamed