Hiding in Plain Sight: A Novel
By (Author) Nuruddin Farah
Penguin Putnam Inc
Hudson Street Press (an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc)
15th January 2017
United States
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
FIC
Paperback
352
Width 135mm, Height 202mm, Spine 19mm
280g
A bold new novel that "augments a body of work worthy of a Nobel Prize" (Kirkus Reviews), from the internationally acclaimed author of Crossbones Nuruddin Farah-"the most important African novelist to emerge in the past twenty-five years" (The New York Review of Books)-returns with a provocative, unforgettable tale about family, freedom, and loyalty. A departure in theme and setting, Hiding in Plain Sight is a profound exploration of the tensions between liberty and obligation, the ways in which gender and sexual orientation define us, and the unintended consequences of the secrets we keep. When Bella, a fashion photographer living in Rome, learns of her beloved half-brother's murder, she travels to Nairobi to care for her niece and nephew. But when their mother resurfaces, reasserting her maternal rights and bringing with her a gale of chaos and confusion that mirrors the deepening political instability in the region, Bella must decide how far she will go to obey the call of sisterly responsibility.
Praise for Hiding in Plain Sight:
This novel Farah's 12th takes us deep into the domestic life of a sophisticated African family, with great emotional effect Each of the kidsbecomes starkly real in their intelligence, ingenuity, anger, and grief. Even their outrageous mother (and her selfish choices) seems credible This family, our families, Africa and Europe and America, have never seemed closer in the way we live now and this engaging novel, from its explosive beginning to its complex yet uplifting last scenes, shows us why. Alan Cheuse, NPR
Absorbing and provocative [Farahs] characters are given heft through personal histories and anecdotes, and he writes evocatively about everything from Nairobi traffic to Kenyan game reserves to, importantly, how Somalis are seen not just through the eyes of others, but through their own. (4 stars) USA Today
Hiding in Plain Sight may begin with a terrorist attackbut this is not a novel about violence...The rewards of reading Hiding in Plain Sight lie in Farahs sensitive exploration of grief and his depiction of a familys love for one anotherFarah is particularly adept at evoking the way in which the sight of a familiar face or place can trigger painful memories and how comfort can come to us from unexpected sources. New York Times Book Review
A rich exploration of political and social crises[and] a sensitive story about living in the shadow of grief, learning to forgive and trying to answer the question, What does it mean to be Somali in this day and age Washington Post
Nuruddin Farah is the author of eleven previous novels, which have been translated into more than twenty languages and won numerous awards, including the Neustadt International Prize for Literature. He lives in Cape Town, South Africa, and Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, where he is Distinguished Professor of Literature at Bard College.