Emmaus
By (Author) Alessandro Baricco
Translated by Ann Goldstein
McSweeney's Publishing
McSweeney's Publishing
16th July 2013
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
134
Width 152mm, Height 203mm, Spine 6mm
204g
Follows four friends, all devout Catholics from poor, but proud, Italian families as they advance from adolescence to manhood, fighting the problems and uncertainty of youth, while attracted to the same hyper-sexual woman.
"Imagine a Virgin Suicides in which the boys, not the girls, are consumed and destroyed by the crypto-religious energies of adolescence. Imagine a book that will make you wish you could be a teenage Italian Catholic boy the way reading Astonishing X-Men #1-24 will make you wish you could be a Mutant, despite the enormous and somewhat equivalent difficulties involved on either count. Imagine writing which renders so precisely the experience of being simultaneously alienated and at home in a life that it feels sometimes, just like life, too beautiful to bear. And imagine a novel that seems finally to warrant that word that every sensible person believes ought rightfully only to be applied to things which actually glow: luminous. Now stop imagining these things; Alessandro Baricco has already imagined them all, and made them real in Emmaus."Chris Adrian
Emmaus operates at such high intensity that all three times I set the book downtwice to make coffee, once to eat a small lunchmy eyes took minutes to readjust, so flat and muddy and standard definition did the world around me appear by comparison." Adam Levin, author of Hot Pink and The Instructions
"Gorgeously narrated, with densely beautiful language and metaphor.Terse and elegant, perfect." Cleveland Plain Dealer
The haunting prose is soaked in a poetic sense of doom and brokenness, a hard-edged working-class lyricism reminiscent of Tillie Olson's dustbowl classic Yonnondio." The Daily Beast
A painful and lyrical chronicle of adolescence...Finishing it feels like waking up from a dream."Three Percent
"A short, haunting philosophical novel." Shelf Awareness
"Alessandro Baricco's new novel is about religion and sin, the sacred and the blasphemous, but perhaps above all about life, about the complicated and painful ways in which we approach it, the prices we pay, the losses and gains that add up to a figure that is always open-ended. It's an eternal storynot new yet always containing original elements that can render it authentic, possible, verifiable, if we know how to see it."Il Mattino
"Emmaus is a book about how difficult it is to see truly, in all times and in our own time. Thus it is the story of a fictionthat is to say a universe molded over timethat shatters under pressure of the cruelties of truth. But, at the same time, it is also the story of how, amid the ruins, the confusing world of resurrection appears."La Repubblica
A riveting read"Switchback Journal
"It's the sinister caprice with which he and his characters seem to take in blowing out their fine lines that takes this from being a beautifully written novel, to being a beautifully human novel." City Book Review
Alessandro Baricco is an Italian writer, director, and performer. He has won the Prix Mdicis tranger in France and the Selezione Campiello, Viareggio, and Palazzo al Bosco prizes in Italy. Ann Goldstein is an editor at The New Yorker. She has translated three novels by Elena FerranteThe Days of Abandonment, Troubling Love, The Lost DaughterClash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio, The Chill by Romano Bilenchi, The Father and the Stranger by Giancarlo de Cataldo, and The Worst Intentions by Alessandro Piperno. Her translation of Linda Ferri's Cecilia is forthcoming in May 2010. She received a PEN Renato Poggioli Translation Award and was a visiting scholar at the American Academy in Rome. She is currently editing the complete works of Primo Levi, for which she received a Guggenheim Translation fellowship. She lives in New York.