The Long Silence of Mario Salviati
Summary
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The Long Silence of Mario Salviati by Etienne Van Heerden
When Ingi Friedlander travels to Yearsonend in the rugged interior of South Africa to purchase a statue, its eccentric sculptor, Jonty Jack, does not want to sell - he says it was not his creation, but simply appeared miraculously. Ingi decides to stay and try to win Jonty's trust, but soon realises that the townspeople suspect she has come to seek a different treasure - the legendary wagon of gold brought in by defeated Boer soldiers. Gradually she prises open the secrets of the past, secrets of greed, racism and vaulting ambition, whose key lies with the Italian POW Mario Salviati - deaf, dumb and now blind. Watched over by a very earthy angel and long dead humans, Ingi forces a resolution with the past and faces up to her own future.
A wondrous tale, weaving magic realism and history, in which Van Heerden captures the stark beauty of the Karoo and its people* Xan Rice, The Times *
Extraordinary ... Mario Salviati is a compelling and moving creation. * Christopher Hope, Guardian *
Rich in insight and hope ... an impressively colourful picture of a fascinating and contradictory country. * Mark Stanton, Scotsman *
If ever a book captured the static charge of a sunbaked landscape, it's Etienne van Heerden's magical fifth novel ... The tales [Ingi] hears are romantic, tragic, funny and bloody, preserved like fossils in sandstone * Helen Brown, Daily Telegraph *
It's easy to see why Van Heerden is being described as an Afrikaans Marquez ... [he is] an exceptionally gifted writer. * Scotland on Sunday *
A complex tale, full of richly drawn characters ... fascinating * Margaret Quinn, Big Issue *
Magical ... a new literary star is emerging * OK! magazine *
Dazzling storytelling magically weaves the fantastical with the everyday and lends a compelling power to the author's meditations on history, art and life. * Guardian *
Engrossing * Choice Magazine *
Extraordinary ... Mario Salviati is a compelling and moving creation. * Christopher Hope, Guardian *
Rich in insight and hope ... an impressively colourful picture of a fascinating and contradictory country. * Mark Stanton, Scotsman *
If ever a book captured the static charge of a sunbaked landscape, it's Etienne van Heerden's magical fifth novel ... The tales [Ingi] hears are romantic, tragic, funny and bloody, preserved like fossils in sandstone * Helen Brown, Daily Telegraph *
It's easy to see why Van Heerden is being described as an Afrikaans Marquez ... [he is] an exceptionally gifted writer. * Scotland on Sunday *
A complex tale, full of richly drawn characters ... fascinating * Margaret Quinn, Big Issue *
Magical ... a new literary star is emerging * OK! magazine *
Dazzling storytelling magically weaves the fantastical with the everyday and lends a compelling power to the author's meditations on history, art and life. * Guardian *
Engrossing * Choice Magazine *
After a career as an advocate and then in advertising, Etienne Van Heerden taught at Rhodes University, South Africa, the University of Amsterdam and was Writer in Residence at Utrecht University. He is currently Professor of Literature at the University of Cape Town, and is the author of a collection of short stories and four previous novels, including the multi-prize-winning Ancestral Voices.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780340819999 |
| ISBN 10 | 0340819995 |
| Title | The Long Silence of Mario Salviati |
| Author | Etienne Van Heerden |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Hodder & Stoughton |
| Year published | 2003-02-17 |
| Number of pages | 448 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |