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Feral River
Contributor(s): Toro, Xelís de (Author), Rutherford, John (Translator), Sanders, Jim (Illustrator)
ISBN: 9543841055     ISBN-13: 9789543841059
Publisher: Small Stations Press
OUR PRICE:   $18.99  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: November 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
- Fiction | Native American & Aboriginal
Physical Information: 0.58" H x 5.25" W x 8" (0.65 lbs) 256 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

A boat with the charred body of a man crucified on its mast turns up at the mouth of the river in Romero, a town on the frontier. The boat belongs to the owner of the printing-firm that publishes the local newspaper. He engages Marqu s, who is from the east coast and claims that he can write, to head upriver to find out the causes of the boatman's death. His only deckhand is a mestizo boy called Cordel who's learned his trade from the previous boatman ('What you steer isn't the boat, it's the river'). They soon reach the mission, which is staffed by a single friar, Father Bento ('He seemed to chew his words like a cow chewing grass before releasing them in short bursts'). The friar asks if Marqu s has come to judge, to govern or to execute. 'To tell, ' is his answer, 'I'm a writer.' Marqu s, however, soon falls into a fever and has to be cured by the healing-woman from the local Aventurei Indian tribe. He realises that entering the world of the river is like clambering up a liquid wall on which there are no ledges or crannies for hands and feet to cling to. There is an obvious parallel between this narrative and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, in which the journey is an end in itself and the reader doesn't know what secrets the river will reveal. There is also the writer's own personal journey in search of fulfilment through his art. Marqu s and Cordel will be joined on board by Rufus the Strongman and Ela, circus workers, as they struggle to come to grips with the tangle, both real and imagined, of the jungle. Xel s de Toro is a Galician performance artist, musician and award-winning writer based in the south of England. He is the author of five works of adult fiction (Feral River being the most recent), several children's books and a book of poetry that was published by Pighog Press in a bilingual Galician-English edition, The Book of Invisible Bridges. John Rutherford is an Emeritus Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford. He founded and directed the Centre for Galician Studies at Oxford, which is now named after him. He has translated Cervantes's Don Quixote and Leopoldo Alas's La Regenta for Penguin Classics. His other translations include The Book of Invisible Bridges by Xel s de Toro and Halos by Xos Mar a D az Castro.