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portada Kite (16) (Small Stations Fiction)
Type
Physical Book
Translated by
Year
2018
Language
English
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
20.3 x 13.3 x 1.3 cm
Weight
0.26 kg.
ISBN13
9789543840885

Kite (16) (Small Stations Fiction)

Xavier Queipo (Author) · Kirsty Hooper (Translated by) · Small Stations Press · Paperback

Kite (16) (Small Stations Fiction) - Queipo, Xavier ; Hooper, Kirsty

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£ 22.26

  • Condition: New
Origin: U.S.A. (Import costs included in the price)
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Synopsis "Kite (16) (Small Stations Fiction)"

Xavier Queipo's novel Kite follows the life of Francis, a Galician-born emigrant in the United States, who lives in the city of San Rafael, north of San Francisco, and works as a freelance translator and editor. At a showing of Apocalypse Now in the cinema, he meets Rose, a liberal and career-minded Irishwoman, and they start a passionate relationship. But their carefree and hedonistic relationship is threatened when Francis, who has been asked by his publisher, Martin, to complete a translation into English of the Portuguese writer José Saramago's Essay on Blindness in record time, owing to the predictions that Saramago might win the Nobel Prize, is himself diagnosed with the onset of blindness. How will Rose react? How will Francis cope with this descent into darkness? And will he be able to finish his translation of Saramago's work in time? Kite takes us on a journey into the lives of emigrants in the United States whose traditional upbringing is often in conflict with the permissive, liberal society they inhabit. Then there is Andy, Francis's ex-lover and a loyal friend, for whom he still harbours intense feelings, and a return to the Galicia of his birth, an experience Francis hopes will be balsamic, but which may prove catastrophic. We are left with the image of a Chinese boy on the beach in San Rafael, trying to fly his kite, the symbol of something (or someone) at the mercy of the wind. The boy is grateful for the help Francis offers, but unsure whether to accept. There is the gesture; we are left with the time and space to interpret it.

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