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Abundance of Wild Roses Main [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 222x141x30 mm, kaal: 425 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2024
  • Kirjastus: Canongate Books
  • ISBN-10: 1838858164
  • ISBN-13: 9781838858162
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 222x141x30 mm, kaal: 425 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2024
  • Kirjastus: Canongate Books
  • ISBN-10: 1838858164
  • ISBN-13: 9781838858162
Teised raamatud teemal:

Critically acclaimed author Feryal Ali-Gauhar's UK debut An Abundance of Wild Roses is a novel that combines lyrical storytelling with urgent contemporary themes of gender violence, tradition and patriarchy

In the Black Mountains of Pakistan, the discovery of an unconscious, unknown man is the first stone in an avalanche of chaos. The head of the village is beset with problems - including the injured stranger - and failing to find his way out. His daughter receives a love letter and incurs her father's wrath. A lame boy foretells disaster, but nobody is listening. Trapped in terrible danger, a wolf-dog is battling ice and death to save a soldier's life. Beaten by her addict husband for bearing him only daughters, a woman is pregnant again - but can this child save her?

In a land woven with myth, chained with tradition and afflicted by war and the march of progress, the spirits of the mountains keep a baleful eye on the struggles of the villagers who scrape a living from the bodies of their wildlife. As the elements turn on the village, can humanity find a way to co-exist with nature that doesn't destroy either of them?

Arvustused

Feryal Ali-Gauhar's writing helps us see the world as she does - clearly. To see how human beings are both awful and kind, and how often animals are far kinder than humans, and to feel the mountains and the rivers and the wind speak to you. But above all, this is a story that helps you understand the greatest mystery of all: love -- RADHIKA JHA Written with the joyful, precise confidence of one who knows and understands her subject intimately, and who, having looked at the old, individualistic trope of the hero's journey, has resolutely turned her back on it . . . This world at once strange and familiar is evoked with great skill . . . The language sings, weaving a spell * * Wasafiri * * Exceptionally well-told . . . Feryal writes with complete passion and dedication about her central themes - feminism, environmentalism and the elements that must be respected about dissimilar cultures * * Friday Times * * An Abundance of Wild Roses will leave you breathless . . . There is a deep and poetic sadness in Feryal Ali-Gauhar's writing [ and she] writes with compassion * * Dawn * * Compelling * * Natura by WWF * * Lyrical * * Camden New Journal * * Praise for No Space for Further Burials: In No Space for Further Burials, Feryal Ali Gauhar has crafted a novel of unrelenting truth held in transcendent prose and an exquisite grace. There is no easy redemption here, but there is light and more light -- CHRIS ABANI In writing through the eyes of an American captive in Afghanistan, Feryal Ali Gauhar has fashioned a fascinating two-way mirror in which we see the author creating an Other confronting Otherness. As in Richard Powers's hostage novel Ploughing in the Dark, the mask of character reveals as much as it conceals * * STEWART O'NAN * * An unbearably beautiful book, one you will not soon forget. . . . What Gauhar shows us is that in a war there are only those who die and those who survive, and sometimes even those lines get blurred. And that's what keeps you hungrily turning the pages -- RADHIKA JHA Praise for The Scent of Wet Earth in August: The Scent of Wet Earth in August was widely acclaimed across the globe . . . it blends Ali Gauhar's filmmaking sensibilities . . . the relentless experience of loss, of the endangered lives of the moral "others" - the outcasts in the much loved and hated red-light district of Lahore * * Friday Times * *

Feryal Ali-Gauhar is a teacher, filmmaker, actor, writer and activist. Her first novel, The Scent of Wet Earth in August, was a bestseller in India; her second novel, No Space for Further Burials, won the Patras Bokhari award and was translated into several European languages. Her third novel, An Abundance of Wild Roses, was written with the assistance of the Roger Deakin award for environmental activism. Ali-Gauhar has served as a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador for the Population Fund, and has worked extensively with women and children subjected to violence and sexual crimes. She spent forty years in the development sector, focusing on poverty, marginalisation and political inclusion. For the past fifteen years, she has worked on the two largest dams in South Asia in the area of cultural heritage management. Ali-Gauhar has been imprisoned twice by two military regimes in Pakistan. She lives in Lahore with twenty-four rescued animals, including several donkeys, a turtle and four dogs.