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The Descartes Highlands

di Eric Gamalinda

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
3013792,066 (3.16)2
One of thePhilippine Daily Inquirer''s Top 10 Books of 2014 ANewPages Book Stand Editor''s Pick "Darkly spellbinding...With a keen eye for splendor amid the grotesque, Gamalinda writes with a poet''s heart and a philosopher''s mind, while enthralling readers with emotional, gritty storytelling." --Booklist "A mesmerizing story full of mystery...intricate...beautiful writing." --Publishers Weekly "It''s Gamalinda''s best and most accessible novel yet, deserving to be read by as many people as possible." --Philippine Daily Inquirer "It felt so easy to get swept up in this novel. The language is beautiful....a beautifully written book." --NewPages "The wait for Gamalinda''s first US based publication was well worth [it]...An indispensable, powerful portrayal of broken families trapped in the centripetal forces of transnational capital and postcolonial politics." --Asian American Literature Fans "Gamalinda...does indeed write fearlessly...in rich, unflinching prose. This storytelling stayed with me...I was compelled to keep reading by the strength of the writing (it''s not for nothing that Gamalinda is the recipient of the Philippine National Book Award, a Palanca Memorial Award, and a Philippine Centennial Prize)." --Galatea Ressurects #24 "I recommend this book to those with large, giving hearts, who can afford to spend the emotional capital demanded here." --Basso Profundo "The Descartes Highlands is a psychologically taut drama that unravels right in front of you...I guarantee that you will be richly rewarded." --Zachary Mule "Behind Eric Gamalinda''s jagged, ice-pick prose is an urgent need to connect and to understand. Are we more than the sum of our histories? What is this accident of being? Why is there anything at all? Written at the edge of a sinkhole and determined to resist its pull,The Descartes Highlands is about nothing less than the whole bewildering dream that is human consciousness." --David Hollander, author ofL.I.E. "No one writes like Eric Gamalinda, though we wish we all could.The Descartes Highlands, an amazing work of brutal candor girded by a philosopher''s calm, entwines our present despair with the horrific pasts we will not escape. One of the most dazzling novelists writing in America today, Eric Gamalinda has an almost classical Greek faith in the redemptive power of art. This novel delivers a commitment to beauty as unflinching as the bleak truths it tells--about globalization, about colonialism, about our human madness--offering in turn what seems our only, paradoxical hope: thepained telling of our story--a gorgeous and bitter feast." --Gina Apostol, author ofGun Dealers'' Daughter Two men, each unaware of the other, share a common family secret: they were sold for adoption by their American father shortly after their births in the Philippines. Three alternating stories interweave the experiences of father Andrew Breszky and the two sons who try to connect and piece together the puzzle of their reckless, impulsive father. One lives in New York and the other grows up in the south of France, later traveling all over Asia as a documentary filmmaker. Both will discover that their relationships somehow echo that of the young man whose history eludes them. Celebrated Filipino writer Eric Gamalinda''s international debut novel is a contemporary work of ideas that combines mystery, film noir, and existential philosophy. Highly intricate and written in a style reminiscent of the maverick narrative techniques of such filmmakers as Andrei Tarkovsky and Béla Tarr, and with some of the philosophical underpinnings of Michel Houellebecq or Javier Marías. Named after the region of the moon whereApollo 16 landed in the same year these men were born,The Descartes Highlands demonstrates that for lives marked by unrelieved loneliness, the only hope lies in the redemptive power of love.… (altro)
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Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
To dark for me. And confusing...difficult to keep up with the changing stories and characters. ( )
  PJ817 | Oct 9, 2019 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This books had an interesting concept but I often found it had to follow. The novel weaves together the stories of three men. I kept getting confused between who was who and which characters they were involved with. ( )
  reb922 | Jan 31, 2016 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
The Descartes Highlands is a very ambitious book structurally. The narrative weaves back and forth among three men and across a generation in time. The three are related: one has fathered the other two in the Philippines and put them out for adoption as infants to Western families. The plot, or perhaps “theme” would be more accurate, is the characters’ discovery that the others exist and their ultimately unsuccessful efforts to establish contact. There’s a lot of heavy-handed parallelism among the characters – the father spends time in a real prison, the boys have created their own – and ruminations on what it means to be orphaned or adopted. It’s a bit of work to keep the characters differentiated as the narration shifts from chapter to chapter. In the end, I didn’t find them likeable or interesting enough to make the effort. I lost interest in whether they found themselves or each other. ( )
  Larxol | Jan 15, 2015 |
As a prefatory note: I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

This is the type of book that will be taught in literature courses in years to come. Whatever you think that implies, you’re probably correct. It is a book filled with complicated themes, emotions, and relationships, contradictions and contrasts and juxtapositions – just like real life. The situations described are, at once, beautiful and messy. Often times the prose is brilliantly written and profound, other times more subtle, but requiring contemplation most all of the time. In short, this is a book that requires the reader to pay attention and think. It can be challenging. The plot structure alone requires some deft footwork, as it juggles the interconnected yet almost entirely separate lives of a man and two sons (born of different women) he sold for adoption upon their birth in early 1970’s Philippines. You want complicated? How about abortion, revolution, torture, Danish cinema, Cotard’s syndrome, abandonment, belonging, and search for one’s identity. These are a few of the concepts the author thoughtfully explores. Most of the characters are not particularly likable or, at the very least, their motives not easy to discern and their decisions not always logical. There are frequent and typically graphic sex scenes. And, as in life, not everything is buttoned up nicely just because you reach a milestone. In this case, by end of the book, there are still unanswered questions about some of the characters. Yet, I did not feel the journey was incomplete. It’s more like the driver with whom I had shared a ride was dropping me off near my destination – maybe not at the doorstep, but close enough so that I can get there if that’s still what I want. Then again, I might choose to go somewhere else entirely. Either way, I was treated to a thought-provoking and memorable expedition. ( )
  d2ward | Jan 6, 2015 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I forced myself to finish this book. Eric Gamalinda pushed his story to extremes employing a jagged narrative and an attempt at dreamlike imagery that did not work. Instead of feeling like a deeply complex novel, it felt contrived and belabored. The existential philosophical thoughts espoused in its preliminary PR were lost within Gamalinda’s overworked meanderings. The title’s reference was far-fetched and overly emphasized. Like the rest of the novel it was a parade of excess.

So why did I give a three star rating for what sounds like a 1 or 2 star review? There is something in the author’s writing that speaks of knowledge, art and skill. He is overreaching with an apt hand. Therefore, I think there is reason to look at Gamalinda’s earlier novels, which were published in his native language, before making a final assessment about his work. ( )
  BALE | Jan 2, 2015 |
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One of thePhilippine Daily Inquirer''s Top 10 Books of 2014 ANewPages Book Stand Editor''s Pick "Darkly spellbinding...With a keen eye for splendor amid the grotesque, Gamalinda writes with a poet''s heart and a philosopher''s mind, while enthralling readers with emotional, gritty storytelling." --Booklist "A mesmerizing story full of mystery...intricate...beautiful writing." --Publishers Weekly "It''s Gamalinda''s best and most accessible novel yet, deserving to be read by as many people as possible." --Philippine Daily Inquirer "It felt so easy to get swept up in this novel. The language is beautiful....a beautifully written book." --NewPages "The wait for Gamalinda''s first US based publication was well worth [it]...An indispensable, powerful portrayal of broken families trapped in the centripetal forces of transnational capital and postcolonial politics." --Asian American Literature Fans "Gamalinda...does indeed write fearlessly...in rich, unflinching prose. This storytelling stayed with me...I was compelled to keep reading by the strength of the writing (it''s not for nothing that Gamalinda is the recipient of the Philippine National Book Award, a Palanca Memorial Award, and a Philippine Centennial Prize)." --Galatea Ressurects #24 "I recommend this book to those with large, giving hearts, who can afford to spend the emotional capital demanded here." --Basso Profundo "The Descartes Highlands is a psychologically taut drama that unravels right in front of you...I guarantee that you will be richly rewarded." --Zachary Mule "Behind Eric Gamalinda''s jagged, ice-pick prose is an urgent need to connect and to understand. Are we more than the sum of our histories? What is this accident of being? Why is there anything at all? Written at the edge of a sinkhole and determined to resist its pull,The Descartes Highlands is about nothing less than the whole bewildering dream that is human consciousness." --David Hollander, author ofL.I.E. "No one writes like Eric Gamalinda, though we wish we all could.The Descartes Highlands, an amazing work of brutal candor girded by a philosopher''s calm, entwines our present despair with the horrific pasts we will not escape. One of the most dazzling novelists writing in America today, Eric Gamalinda has an almost classical Greek faith in the redemptive power of art. This novel delivers a commitment to beauty as unflinching as the bleak truths it tells--about globalization, about colonialism, about our human madness--offering in turn what seems our only, paradoxical hope: thepained telling of our story--a gorgeous and bitter feast." --Gina Apostol, author ofGun Dealers'' Daughter Two men, each unaware of the other, share a common family secret: they were sold for adoption by their American father shortly after their births in the Philippines. Three alternating stories interweave the experiences of father Andrew Breszky and the two sons who try to connect and piece together the puzzle of their reckless, impulsive father. One lives in New York and the other grows up in the south of France, later traveling all over Asia as a documentary filmmaker. Both will discover that their relationships somehow echo that of the young man whose history eludes them. Celebrated Filipino writer Eric Gamalinda''s international debut novel is a contemporary work of ideas that combines mystery, film noir, and existential philosophy. Highly intricate and written in a style reminiscent of the maverick narrative techniques of such filmmakers as Andrei Tarkovsky and Béla Tarr, and with some of the philosophical underpinnings of Michel Houellebecq or Javier Marías. Named after the region of the moon whereApollo 16 landed in the same year these men were born,The Descartes Highlands demonstrates that for lives marked by unrelieved loneliness, the only hope lies in the redemptive power of love.

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