The Country Will Bring Us No Peace
By (Author) Matthieu Simard
Translated by Pablo Strauss
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
2nd January 2020
Canada
General
Fiction
843.6
Short-listed for Governor Generals Literary Award Translation 2020 (Canada)
Paperback
128
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
Simon and Marie cant seem to have a baby. And so they flee the city for an idyllic village, where things will certainly be better. But the town is gloomy, even hostile -- things havent been the same since the factory closed down and a broadcast antenna was erected. Now there are no birds singing, and people have started disappearing.
"Simard wrote one of those books that perfectly suits itself: all of the elements, the prose, the characters, style, the structure, and the gambits work for the feelings and experience it aims to express, right through to the beautiful and haunting ending." -P.T Smith,Montreal Review of Books
"The entire narrative is superbly controlled and imaginatively translated, leading us to an ending which, though signaled early on, is still a shock."The Irish Times
"With an ending that is an absolute shocker, this novel is everything todays Literature has to be and is often lost in commercial choices where quality is compromised. It is a revelation, a dark jewel. A haunting presence." -The Opinionated Reader
"A novel about silence, tinged with the fantastic,The Country Will Bring Us No Peacesneaks the brutality of grief into your imagination." -Dana Hansen,Hamilton Review of Books
"The novella delivers gut-and-heart-wrenching twists in a language which, throughout, retains a distinctive, elegiac lyricism expertly conveyed in this English translation by Pablo Strauss. This is a special book." -to the end of the word
"The Country Will Bring Us No Peaceis an outstanding book that will resonate with lovers of great storytelling as well as with those who enjoy work happening in the interstitial space between literary fiction and psychological horror." -Volume 1 Brooklyn
Matthieu Simard is a prolific French writer, whose first three novels led to La Presse calling him one of the most promising authors of his generation. He is the author of six novels, one of which was a finalist for a Governor Generals Literary Award for childrens literature.