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Cumboto
Contributor(s): Díaz Sánchez, Ramón (Author), Upton, John (Translator)
ISBN: 0292740743     ISBN-13: 9780292740747
Publisher: University of Texas Press
OUR PRICE:   $28.66  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 1969
Qty:
Additional Information
Dewey: FIC
Series: Texas Pan American
Physical Information: 0.64" H x 6" W x 9" (0.93 lbs) 286 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Latin America
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This richly orchestrated novel, which won a national literary prize in the author's native land, Venezuela, also earned international recognition when the William Faulkner Foundation gave it an award as the most notable novel published in Ibero America between 1945 and 1962. Cumboto's disturbing story unfolds during the early decades of the twentieth century on a Venezuelan coconut plantation, in a turbulent Faulknerian double world of black and white. It records the lives of Don Federico, the effete survivor of a once vigorous family of landowners, and his Negro servant Natividad, who since the days of their mutual childhood has been his only friend. Young Federico, psychologically impotent and lost to human contact, lives on as a lonely recluse in the century-old main house of Cumboto, surrounded by descendants of African slaves who still manage, despite his apathy, to keep the plantation on its feet. Natividad's heroic and selfless struggle to redeem his friend by awakening him to the stirrings of the earth and life about him sets in motion a series of events that are to shatter Federico's childlike world: a headlong love affair with a voluptuous black girl, her terrified flight in the face of the bitter condemnation of her own people, and the unexpected appearance, twenty years later, of their extraordinary son. Throughout the novel runs a recurring theme: neither race can survive without the other. Black and white, Díaz Sánchezz suggests, embody contrasting aspects of human nature, which are not inimical but complementary: the languid intellectualism of European culture must be tempered with the indestructible vitality and intuition of the African soul if humanity is ever fully to comprehend the living essence of the world.

Contributor Bio(s): Upton, John: - John Upton (1917–2005) earned an M.A. from the University of Madrid and lived for a number of years in various Spanish-speaking countries.