Diop explores the cruelties of colonialism in a powerful story of love destroyed

Sunday Times, Historical Fiction Pick of the Month

A compelling romantic adventure... Intricately layered, enfolding stories within stories, Beyond the Door of No Return is many things at once: mystery, autobiography, epistolary, romance, adventure, confession. Through an act of remembrance, Diop seeks to build a repository of lives and histories lost to the slave trade

Financial Times

Stunningly realized and written in exquisite prose, Beyond the Door of No Return is a love story, an adventure tale, and an unflinching examination of the unexpected ways that colonialism and greed ravaged everyone it touched, European and African. It is above all else, a spellbinding novel about the high price of betrayal-of others, and oneself

- Maaza Mengiste, Booker Prize–shortlisted author of The Shadow King,

Se alle

A hypnotic, powerful historical novel in which stories nest within one another like dolls... In less skilled hands, the novel's structure would not work... But the opposite happens here. In a few vivid brush strokes, Diop brings to life not only Adanson, but also the ways in which his dreams, loves and losses shaped the lives of those around him. It all coheres mesmerizingly

New York Times

Does a masterful job of showing up the racist brutalities of the slave trade and its associated cruelties and hypocrisies... and wraps it all up in a gripping, galloping narrative that challenges perceptions to the very last page

Marie Claire

I read Beyond the Door of No Return with pleasure and admiration. David Diop has opened up a new way of thinking about the eighteenth century and its hideous cruelties

- Abdulrazak Gurnah, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature and author of Afterlives,

With Beyond The Door of No Return, David Diop once again makes us re-examine and reimagine West African history and the wrongdoing that has been done there by Europeans. This book illustrates and raises questions about guilt, language, othering, treachery, adventure and love. It is a beautifully written, yet easy to read, novel, that will leave you thinking long after you finish it

- Sally Hayden, the award-winning author of My Fourth Time, We Drowned,

A formerly enslaved woman gets her revenge... Diop has turned fascinating historical records into fiction... Maram's touching story offers crucial lessons about unconscionable acts of slavery, perpetrated on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean

Star Tribune

Less brutal than Diop's International Booker Prize-winning At Night All Blood is Black but no less powerful... With its sumptuous physical descriptions, shades of language, and smooth overlap of truth and invention, this is masterful storytelling. The ease with which the narratives unfold belies the emotional force they gather... A mesmerizing tale

Kirkus, starred review

A captivating intergenerational epic influenced by Senegalese oral tradition... A novel to devour quickly, but which will leave readers contemplating its story long after

Publishers Weekly, starred review

Further endorsement of fiction's ability for revelation... There is suspense, adversity and tension

Irish Times

At once melancholy and luminous

Le Monde

Diop's poetic sensibility marks every sentence of this resonant story

Big Issue

Reading about another country, another culture, another age has the brain-opening effect that Adanson experienced almost 300 years ago... There's nothing quite like this book out there

The Times

[A] thrilling novel, full of escapade and adventure, but also an elegant meditation on the relationships between fathers and daughters, and on the challenges of reckoning with the legacy of personal and political histories

Daily Mail

Offers a portrait of a world in which beauty and brutality co-exist

Mail on Sunday

A sublime odyssey confronting the universal values of the Enlightenment with the Atlantic slave trade

CNEWS

Definitively confirms David Diop as a major author on the modern literary landscape

Télérama

Gripping... A twisty novel

Literary Review

A humanist meditation anchored in African tradition... A historical epic with a bewitching style... A superb adventure story

Femina

David Diop masterfully blends genres... Weaving together Western myths and African beliefs, the rationality of the dawning age of science and timeless magic

La Vie Hebdo

Bewitching at first, the story takes a cruel, overwhelming turn as the time for decisions comes

Le Canard enchaîné

A magnificent novel about romantic passion, and how it destroys as much as it saves

Les Inrocks

A compelling critique of colonial violence and the dehumanisation of Black people, this book illustrates how inhabiting another language promotes compassion

Observer

It's hard to imagine a more gripping or fertile subject for Diop's fictional exploration... Romantically and dramatically is how he tells it here, with a delight in narrative that honours Senegalese oral culture

Guardian

A complex tale rooted in historical research and filled with curiosities

TLS

A stunning and adventurous novel [that] invites the reader to wrestle with belief as a concept, whether with regard to religion, methods of storytelling, or even personal belief in oneself to write and rewrite your own narratives

Vox

A tragic adventure novel related in crisp epistolary form

Sydney Morning Herald

'A gripping, galloping narrative that challenges perceptions to the very last page', Marie Claire 'David Diop has opened up a new way of thinking about the eighteenth century and its hideous cruelties', Abdulrazak Gurnah, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 'It's hard to imagine a more gripping or fertile subject', Guardian_____ Prais, 1806. The renowned botanist Michel Adanson is dying. His last word is a woman's name: Maram. But who was she?Searching for the answer, Adanson's daughter discovers a journal of his youthful travels in Senegal, which tells a story of wild adventure and impossible desires. It reveals how he heard of a young woman sold into slavery who did the impossible and returned. How he became obsessed with finding her, whatever the cost. And how a man who longed to solve the mysteries of natural instead found himself grappling with the impulses of the heart.
Les mer
Diop explores the cruelties of colonialism in a powerful story of love destroyed

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781782278412
Publisert
2024-08-29
Utgiver
Vendor
Pushkin Press
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
256

Forfatter
Oversetter

Biographical note

DAVID DIOP was born in Paris in 1966 and grew up in Senegal. He now lives in France, where he is a professor of Eighteenth Century Literature at the University of Pau. David's second novel, At Night All Blood is Black, has been translated into more than 30 languages, winning the International Booker Prize and the LA Times Book Prize, as well as major prizes in France, Italy, the Netherlands and Switzerland, and was chosen by Barack Obama as one of his summer reads. Beyond the Door of No Return was longlisted for the Goncourt Prize, has sold over 120,000 copies in France, and was shortlisted for the National Book Award in the US. SAM TAYLOR is a translator, novelist and journalist. He is the author of four novels and the award-winning translator of more than 60 books from French, including Laurent Binet's HHhH, Leïla Slimani's Lullaby, and Hubert Mingarelli's A Meal in Winter.