pickabook books with huge discounts for everyone
pickabook books with huge discounts for everyone
Visit our new collection website www.collectionsforschool.co.uk
     
Email: Subscribe to news & offers:
Need assistance? Log In/Register


Item Details
Title: THE INQUISITORS' MANUAL
By: Antonio Lobo Antunes, Translator Richard Zenith (Trans)
Format: Paperback

List price: £11.99


We believe that this item is permanently unavailable, and so we cannot source it.

ISBN 10: 0802140521
ISBN 13: 9780802140524
Publisher: GROVE PRESS / ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS
Pub. date: 8 April, 2004
Description: An international best-seller and the novel that established Antunes's reputation in Europe, "The Inquisitors' Manual" is a rewarding and stunning piece of art that shows the damage tyranny does to each layer of society.
Synopsis: Like a Portuguese version of As I Lay Dying, but more ambitious, Antonio Lobo Antunes's eleventh novel chronicles the decadence not just of a family but of an entire society - a society morally and spiritually vitiated by four decades of totalitarian rule. In this his masterful novel, Antonio Lobo Antunes, "one of the most skillful psychological portraitists writing anywhere, renders the turpitude of an entire society through an impasto of intensely individual voices." (The New Yorker) The protagonist and anti-hero Senhor Francisco, a powerful state minister and personal friend of Salazar, expects to be named prime minister when Salazar is incapacitated by a stroke in 1968. Outraged that the President (Admiral Americo Tomas) appoints not him but Marcelo Caetano to the post, Senhor Francisco retreats to his farm in Setubal, where he vaguely plots a coup with other ex-ministers and aged army officers who feel they've been snubbed or forgotten. But it's younger army officers who in 1974 pull off a coup, the Revolution of the Flowers (so called since no shots were fired, carnations sticking out of the butts of the insurgents' rifles), ending 42 years of dictatorship. Senhor Francisco, more paranoid than ever, accuses all the workers at his farm of being communists and sends them away with a brandished shotgun, remaining all alone - a large but empty shadow of his once seeming omnipotence - to defend a decrepit farm from the figments of his imagination. When the novel opens, Senhor Francisco is no longer at the farm but in a nursing home in Lisbon with a bedpan between his legs, having suffered a stroke that left him largely paralyzed. No longer able to speak, he mentally reviews his life and loves. His loves? In fact the only woman he really loved was his wife Isabel, who left him early on, when their son Joao was just a tiny boy. Francisco takes up with assorted women and takes sexual advantage of the young maids on the farm, the steward's teenage daughter, and his secretaries at the Ministry, but he can never get over the humiliation of Isabel having jilted him for another man. Many years later he spots a commonplace shop girl, named Mila, who resembles his ex-wife. He sets the girl and her mother up in a fancy apartment, makes her wear Isabel's old clothes, and introduces her to Salazar and other government officials as his wife, and everyone goes along with the ludicrous sham, because everything about Salazar's Estado Novo ("New State") was sham - from the rickety colonial "empire" in Africa to the emasculate political leaders in the home country, themselves monitored and controlled by the secret police. Once the system of shams tumbles like a castle of cards, Francisco's cuckoldry glares at him with even greater scorn than before, and all around him lie casualties. Mila and her mother return to their grubby notions shop more hopeless than ever, because the mother is dying and Mila is suddenly a spinster without prospects. The steward, with no more farm to manage, moves his family into a squalid apartment and gets a job at a squalid factory. The minister's son, raised by the housekeeper, grows up to be good-hearted but totally inept, so that his ruthless in-laws easily defraud him of his father's farm, which they turn into a tourist resort. The minister's daughter, Paula, whom he had by the cook and who was raised by a childless widow in another town, is ostracized after the Revolution because of who her father was, even though she hardly ever knew him. Isabel, the ex-wife, also ends up all alone, in a crummy kitchenette in Lisbon, but she isn't a casualty of Senhor Francisco or of society or of a political regime but of love, of its near impossibility. Disillusioned by all the relationships she had with men, she stoutly resists Francisco's ardent attempts to win her back, preferring solitude instead. We have to go to the housekeeper, Titina, this novel's most compelling character, to find hope of salvation, however unlikely a source she seems. Unattractive and uneducated, Titina never had a romantic love relationship, though she secretly loved her boss, who never suspected. She ends up, like him, in an old folks' home, and like him she spends her days looking back and dreaming of returning to the farm in its heyday. Old age is a great equalizer. And yet the two characters are not equal. Titina retains her innocence. But it's not the innocence of helpless inability - the case of Joao, Francisco's son - nor is it the pathetic innocence of Romeu, the emotionally and mentally undeveloped co-worker by whom Paula has a son. Titina isn't helpless or ingenuous, and she isn't immune to the less than flattering human feelings of jealousy, impatience and anger. But she never succumbs to baser instincts. She knows her worth and cultivates it. She is a proud woman, but proud only of what she really is and what she has really accomplished in life. At one level (and it operates at many), The Inquisitorssssss' Manual is an inquiry into the difficult coexistence of self-affirmation and tenderness toward others. Their correct balance, which equals human dignity, occurs in the housekeeper."
Publication: US
Imprint: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Returns: Non-returnable
Some other items by this author:
28 PORTUGUESE POETS (PB)
A LITTLE LARGER THAN THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE (PB)
A MORTE DE CARLOS GARDEL (PB)
ACT OF THE DAMNED (PB)
AN EXPLANATION OF THE BIRDS (PB)
BLANK GAZE (HB)
COMMISSION OF TEARS
EDUCATION BY STONE (PB)
EL ARCHIPIELAGO DEL INSOMNIO (PB)
FADO ALEXANDRINO (PB)
KNOWLEDGE OF HELL (HB)
MANUAL DOS INQUISIDORES (PB)
MEDITATION ON RUINS (PB)
MEMORIA DE ELEFANTE (PB)
MIDNIGHT IS NOT IN EVERYONE''S REACH (PB)
O CUS DE JUDAS (PB)
ONTEM NAO TE VI EM BABILONIA (HB)
PESSOA (HB)
PESSOA (PB)
QUE CAVALOS SAO AQUELES QUE FAZEM SOMBRA NO MAR?
SONNETS AND OTHER POEMS (HB)
THE BOOK OF DISQUIET (PB)
THE BOOK OF DISQUIETUDE (PB)
THE EDUCATION OF THE STOIC (PB)
THE FAT MAN AND INFINITY (HB)
THE LAND AT THE END OF THE WORLD (HB)
THE LAND AT THE END OF THE WORLD (PB)
THE NATURAL ORDER OF THINGS (PB)
THE RETURN OF THE CARAVELS (PB)
THE SELECTED PROSE OF FERNANDO PESSOA (PB)
THE SPLENDOR OF PORTUGAL (PB)
WARNING TO THE CROCODILES
WHAT CAN I DO WHEN EVERYTHING'S ON FIRE? (PB)

TOP SELLERS IN THIS CATEGORY
Things Fall Apart (Paperback)
Penguin Books Ltd
Our Price : £7.29
more details
Conclave (Paperback)
Cornerstone
Our Price : £7.29
more details
Lord of the Flies (Paperback)
Faber & Faber
Our Price : £7.29
more details
Wicked (Paperback)
Headline Publishing Group
Our Price : £8.02
more details
A Monster Calls (Paperback)
Walker Books Ltd
Our Price : £6.56
more details
BROWSE FOR BOOKS IN RELATED CATEGORIES
 FICTION
 general & literary fiction
 modern fiction


Information provided by www.pickabook.co.uk
SHOPPING BASKET
  
Your basket is empty
  Total Items: 0
 

NEW
World’s Worst Superheroes GET READY FOR SOME SUPERSIZED FUN!
add to basket





New
No Cheese, Please! A fun picture book for children with food allergies - full of friendship and super-cute characters!Little Mo the mouse is having a birthday party.
add to basket

New
My Brother Is a Superhero Luke is massively annoyed about this, but when Zack is kidnapped by his arch-nemesis, Luke and his friends have only five days to find him and save the world...
add to basket


Picture Book
Animal Actions: Snap Like a Crab
By:
The first title in a new preschool series from Guilherme Karsten.
add to basket