| This is an archived issue of Belletrista. If you are looking for the current issue, you can find it here |
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US author Sigrid Nunez discusses her new novel with Joyce Nickel
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TRIO: Three remarkable works by Kamila Shamsie by Caitlin Fehir
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Belletrista turns one! A brief retrospective and a look ahead
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Reviews
Click on 'Reviews' to see the full list of this issue's reviews...
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LOVE, ANGER, MADNESS: A HAITIAN TRIPTYCH
Marie Vieux-Chavet
Translated from the French by Rose-Myriam Rejouis and Val Vinokur
I have read several books by Haitian writers. None of them could be described as happy. Marie Vieux-Chauvet's 1967 trio of novellas (individually titled Love, Anger and Madness) is possibly the least happy of all of them. It may also be the best.
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Reviewed by Andy Barnes
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THE BLINDNESS OF THE HEART
Julia Franck
Translated from the German by Anthea Bell
A prologue opens the novel. It is some time during World War II and a woman, Alice, abandons her seven-year old son at a railway station. The story proper begins many years earlier in the town of Bautzen … where
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Reviewed by Amanda Meale
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2017: A NOVEL
Olga Slavnikova
Translated from the Russian by Marian Schwartz
If Olga Slavnikova's novel, 2017, is any indication, the near-future of post-Soviet Russia—and the world in general—looks pretty grim on a variety of fronts, in large part because people of the techno-boom have lost touch with their own history and culture.
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Reviewed by Jean Raber
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THE WORD BOOK
Mieko Kanai
Translated from the Japanese by Paul McCarthy
It took me a while to appreciate the many virtues of The Word Book. Having just come off reading a run of novels, I dived into these stories too fast, and had to lift my head out of the water, make a conscious decision to …
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Reviewed by Tim Jones
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A NOVEL BOOKSTORE
Laurence Cossé
Translated from the French by Alison Anderson
Imagine a bookstore that only sold good novels—not commercial drivel or fluffy installments of the latest teen series, but interesting fiction gathered together by book-loving people who refuse to pander to bestseller lists. Essentially, a reader's version of heaven.
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Reviewed by Caitlin Fehir
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