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"Revelatory . . . An aching, dreamlike immersion." -Carl Hoffman, The Washington Post "An intensely powerful work about revolution, compromise, and long-buried secrets . . . A haunting, compelling book." -Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders An atmospheric novel about a father and son in the waning days of colonial Mozambique by the winner of the 2025 PEN/Nabokov Award Diogo Santiago is a celebrated Mozambican poet and intellectual, a well-known professor at the university in his country's capital. On the eve of a cyclone that will devastate the East African coast, he sets out for his…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Revelatory . . . An aching, dreamlike immersion." -Carl Hoffman, The Washington Post "An intensely powerful work about revolution, compromise, and long-buried secrets . . . A haunting, compelling book." -Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders An atmospheric novel about a father and son in the waning days of colonial Mozambique by the winner of the 2025 PEN/Nabokov Award Diogo Santiago is a celebrated Mozambican poet and intellectual, a well-known professor at the university in his country's capital. On the eve of a cyclone that will devastate the East African coast, he sets out for his hometown of Beira to receive a tribute from his fellow citizens. As he travels across Mozambique, his mind turns to the past-to his upbringing, and to the history of his country when it was still a Portuguese colony. Diogo's father, himself a poet and a journalist, witnessed a terrible massacre committed during the waning days of the colonial regime. He was arrested by the Portuguese secret police for trying to reveal what happened-but the officer who oversaw the case kept a journal, which later finds its way into Diogo's hands. As the storm approaches Beira, threatening to wipe away the physical traces of his childhood, Diogo sorts through the journal, old letters, and family stories, and confronts the impermanence of his own memories. Along the way he meets Liana, a woman whose past is mysteriously connected to his own, and whose story just might shed light on what happened to his father. A haunting novel of historical testimony, The Cartographer of Absences is one of Mia Couto's finest works. Drawing on the author's own life in colonial Mozambique, this book is a significant new entry in the world literature canon.
Autorenporträt
Mia Couto, born in Beira, Mozambique, in 1955, is one of the most prominent writers in Portuguese-speaking Africa. After studying medicine and biology in Maputo, he worked as a journalist and headed several Mozambican national newspapers and magazines. Couto has been awarded numerous literary prizes, including the 2014 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, the Camões Prize (the most prestigious Portuguese-language award), the Prémio Vergílio Ferreira, the Prémio União Latina de Literaturas Românicas, and the FIL Literary Award in Romance Languages. He lives in Maputo, where he works as a biologist.