Brazil (novel)

Summary

Brazil is a 1994 novel by the American author John Updike. It contains many elements of magical realism. It is a retelling of the ancient tale of Tristan and Isolde, the subject of many works in opera and ballet.

Brazil
First edition
AuthorJohn Updike
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf
Publication date
1994
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages272 pp
ISBN0-679-43071-7
OCLC28587188
813/.54 20
LC ClassPS3571.P4 B48 1994

Tristão Raposo, a nineteen-year-old black child of the Rio de Janeiro slums, spies Isabel Leme, an eighteen-year-old upper-class white girl, across the hot sands of Copacabana Beach, and presents her with a ring stolen from an American tourist. Their flight into marriage takes them from urban banality to the farthest reaches of Brazil’s wild west, where magic still rules. Privation, violence, captivity and poverty afflict them; his mother curses them, her father strives to separate them, and neither lover is absolutely faithful. Eventually, ancient charms change him to white and her to black. Yet Tristão and Isabel hold on to the belief that each is the other’s fate for life, as they develop in ways they never thought possible.

Critic James Wood described it as 'full of soft writing'.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ Wood, James (19 April 2001). "Gossip in Gilt". London Review of Books. 23 (8).