Black Bird Michel Basilieres Vintage Books Anglais 320 pages
Black Bird Michel Basilieres Vintage Books Anglais 320 pages Broche B ?This macabre, sometimes fantastical, often hilarious first novel?manages to be at once ghastly, farcical and shot through with a pathos that tugs about equally at mind and heart. Black Bird is a terrific read, an epic critique of and lament for the decades of rhetoric and rancour, and blood, that have yet to lead Quebec to the mythic prize of nationhood?. Vive le satirical livre!? -- The Globe and Mail ?a stunning debut novel?wildly inventive and darkly funny?. Bravura plotting and comic talent are only the surface of Black Bird?s achievement. Basilieres has the essential qualities of a first-rate satirist, in spades. He displays an abiding love for his characters, however awfully they behave, but his rage is equally inextinguishable?. His brilliant novel is an extended metaphor for the messy, intractable, essentially unbreakable web that history has made of Canada.? -- Brian Bethune, Maclean's ?At first glance, looks a little like a Canadian take on Jonathan Franzen?s The Corrections. But where Franzen depicts the decline of the nuclear family, Basilieres gives us a core meltdown.... Spirited, clever dead on.? -- The Gazette (Montreal) ?Black Bird rocks. An exuberant new Quebec voice that speaks for all of us living in the spaces in between.? -- Susan Swan ?When someone tells you that a first novel is ?brilliant? or ?stunning,? they?re usually lying and they know it. But occasionally a book comes along that?s as good as the jacket cover blurb says it is. Michel Basilieres? first novel is a work of enormous love; it?s intelligent without the pirouettes, literate without showing off. And very funny. It?s that rare thing among novels, a book you should actually read twice.? -- David Gilmour ?Black Bird is a great, wonderful monster of a novel, from the history of Frere Andre?s black heart to the screeching of the crow, Grace, from its astounding descriptions of Montreal to its observations of the compulsions and frustrations of one Family Desouche, it ushers in a new, hilarious, wildly imaginative, powerful and heartfelt voice.? -- Edward Carey ?If ever a book defied description it is Black Bird. Covering themes as big as Canada itself and as dangerous as the battle field of family life, it is outrageous, hilarious and surreal. It is a remarkable creation, brilliantly original.? -- Mary Lawson ?The delightful, macabre nature of Michel Basilieres? novel doesn?t hide the real sweetness of a writer who so obviously loves his fellows, especially when they are at their worst. Basilieres? comic sensibility is as black and shining as a crow?s wing. I believe Lovecraft must be sitting up in his grave and grinning.? -- Gail Anderson-Dargatz From the Hardcover edition. With comic brilliance and a delight in the macabre, Michel Basilieres holds a fun-house mirror up to a defining moment in Canadian history and reveals, among other things, a family having a very bad year. Holed up in a shambling house at the base of Mount Royal is the family Desouche three generations of English- and French-Canadians caught in the gears of a national emergency. Their world is dark and hard, but alive with hope and expectation. When one of the eldest, an Anglo Montrealer, dies at the hand of one of the youngest, a militant separatist, so begins a year of turmoil and change that culminates in the October Crisis. Grave-robbing Grandfather consorts with prostitutes and mad scientists, loses an eye and gains a new vision. His disenchanted wife bonds with his canny pet crow. Mother sleeps her grief away through the seasons, while Father ineffectively schemes to get rich quick. Meanwhile, their twin children, Marie and Jean-Baptiste, find their personal ambitions clashing with their public actions as they derail each other at every turn. In this wholly original novel alive with misfortune and magic, Michel Basilieres uncovers a Montreal not seen in any other English-Canadian no