|
|
|||
|
||||
Awards
Overview"***SET IN AUSTRALIA*** Some time in the 1840s, Narcisse, a young French sailor is abandoned on the coast of Australia and given up for dead by his shipmates. Seventeen years later he is found living among aboriginal peoples, having apparently forgotten everything of his original identity, including his native French language. Octave de Vallombrun, a well-meaning geographer, takes him under his wing and sets out to bring Narcisse, now known as the ""white savage"" back to ""civilisation"" and to find out what happened during those seventeen years. But can Narcisse (or Amglo as he is now called) cease to be the man he has become, and go back to being the person he was all those years ago? Torn for the second time from all that is familiar to him, he is thrust into a world where he is completely at sea to embark again upon the hazardous voyage between one way of life and another. Observing Narcisse's struggle to adjust to the ways of the white man, Octave too begins to question his assumptions about what it means to be civilised, and to see in a new light the man known as the ""white savage"". AUTHOR: Born in 1959, Francois Garde grew up in Aix-en- Provence and studied at the prestigious Ecole Nationale d'Administration before embarking upon a career as a senior civil servant. He worked for many years in the French Overseas Territories in the Southern Pacific and Indian Oceans, before becoming a novelist. Published in 2012, 'Ce Qu'il Advint du Sauvage Blanc', is Garde's first novel. Winner of nine literary prizes, it was awarded the prestigious Prix Goncourt in the first novel category for 2012. SELLING POINTS: . Awarded nine literary prizes including the prestigious Goncourt Prize in the first novel category. . Translated by Aneesa Abbas Higgins" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Francois Garde , Aneesa Abbas HigginsPublisher: Dedalus Ltd Imprint: Dedalus Ltd Weight: 0.272kg ISBN: 9781910213087ISBN 10: 191021308 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 05 May 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'As a parable about how our own limitations, whether traveller, researcher, scholar, politician or parent, doom our best efforts to failure, it is entertaining, thought-provoking, heart-breaking and highly recommended.' Sarah Gellner in Tribune 'What Became of the White Savage offers no revelations or reassurances. It simply forces us memorably, hauntingly to consider the possibility that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it.' Alana Shilling-Janoff in The Times Literary Supplement 'What Became of the White Savage is a fun read that touches on important ideas of identity, loss and language.' Phoebe Weston-Evans in The Australian .. .offers no revelations or reassurances but forces us memorably, hauntingly, to consider the possibility that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it. -- Alana Shilling-Janoff, The Times Literary Supplement .. .a fun read that touches on important ideas of identity, loss and language. -- Phoebe Weston-Evans, The Australian .. .forces us memorably, hauntingly, to consider that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it. -- Alana Shilling-Janoff, Times Literary Supplement .. .forces us memorably, hauntingly, to consider that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it. -- Alana Shilling-Janoff, Times Literary Supplement .. .a fun read that touches on important ideas of identity, loss and language. -- Phoebe Weston-Evans, The Australian .. .offers no revelations or reassurances but forces us memorably, hauntingly, to consider the possibility that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it. -- Alana Shilling-Janoff, The Times Literary Supplement 'As a parable about how our own limitations, whether traveller, researcher, scholar, politician or parent, doom our best efforts to failure, it is entertaining, thought-provoking, heart-breaking and highly recommended.' Sarah Gellner in Tribune 'What Became of the White Savage is a fun read that touches on important ideas of identity, loss and language.' Phoebe Weston-Evans in The Australian 'What Became of the White Savage offers no revelations or reassurances. It simply forces us memorably, hauntingly to consider the possibility that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it.' Alana Shilling-Janoff in The Times Literary Supplement .. .forces us memorably, hauntingly, to consider that not everything submits to the syntax we invent to describe it. -- Alana Shilling-Janoff, Times Literary Supplement Author InformationBorn in 1959, Fran�ois Garde grew up in Aix-en-Provence and studied at the prestigious Ecole Nationale d'Administration before embarking upon a career as a senior civil servant. He worked for many years in the French Overseas Territories in the Southern Pacific and Indian Oceans, before becoming a novelist. Published in 2012, What Became of the White Savage, is Garde's first novel. Born in London in 1950, Aneesa Abbas Higgins studied Sociology, French and Russian at the University of Sussex and later obtained her MA in Romance Languages and Literatures from the University of London. She taught French for many years before becoming a freelance literary translator. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |