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English
NYRB Classics
15 August 2013
A lyrical and magical story of several generations of Caribbean women suffering and triumphing with perserverance and love against the awful inheritance of slavery, the modern effects of colonialism, and their own society's rejection of individuals. A book that brings out the culture and landscape of the beautiful but ravaged Caribbean islands.

This is an intoxicating tale of love and wonder, mothers and daughters, spiritual values and the grim legacy of slavery on the French Antillean island of Guadeloupe. Here long-suffering Telumee tells her life story and tells us about the proud line of Lougandor women she continues to draw strength from. Time flows unevenly during the long hot blue days as the madness of the island swirls around the villages, and Telumee, raised in the shelter of wide skirts, must learn how to navigate the adversities of a peasant community, the ecstasies of love, and domestic realities while arriving at her own precious happiness. In the words of Toussine, the wise, tender grandmother who raises her, ""Behind one pain there is another. Sorrow is a wave without end. But the horse mustn't ride you, you must ride it.""

A masterpiece of Caribbean literature, The Bridge of Beyond relates the triumph of a generous and hopeful spirit, while offering a gorgeously lush, imaginative depiction of the flora, landscape, and customs of Gua-deloupe. Simone Schwarz-Bart's incantatory prose, interwoven with Creole proverbs and lore, appears here in a remarkable translation by Barbara Bray.
By:  
Introduction by:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   NYRB Classics
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 14mm,  Spine: 128mm
Weight:   282g
ISBN:   9781590176801
ISBN 10:   1590176804
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

SIMONE SCHWARZ-BART (nee Brumant) was born in 1938 in Charente, on the southwest coast of France, and moved with her mother to Guadeloupe when she was three months old. Her father was a soldier in the French army and was absent for the first six years of her life. She later studied in Paris, where she met her future husband, the French writer Andre Schwarz-Bart. They collaborated on two novels, Un plat de porc aux bananes verts (A Dish of Pork with Green Bananas) and La mulatresse Solitude (A Woman Named Solitude), as well as a six-volume encyclopedic work, Hommage a la femme noire (In Praise of Black Women). Schwarz-Bart has traveled widely, living in Senegal and Switzerland and Paris, and eventually settling in Goyave, a small community in Guadeloupe. For a time, she ran a Creole furniture business, and later a restaurant. The Bridge of Beyond, a best seller that Patrick Chamoiseau called inexhaustible and unfathomable, was awarded Elle magazine's literary prize. Schwarz-Bart is also the author of the novel Ti Jean L' horizon (Between Two Worlds), and a play, Ton beau capitaine (Your Handsome Captain). BARBARA BRAY (1924-2010) was a translator of twentieth-century French literature into English. She was an early champion of Marguerite Duras and Samuel Beckett, and also translated the work of Jean Genet, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jean Anouilh, and Alain Robbe-Grillet. JAMAICA KINCAID was born in St. John's, Antigua, and has lived in the United States since she was sixteen. She is the author of several books of fiction and nonfiction, including At the Bottom of the River, A Small Place, Annie John, Mr. Potter, My Brother, Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalayas, and most recently, the novel See Now Then.

Reviews for The Bridge Of Beyond

It is like a fable in the form of a ballad, which is to say it is poetical but not always clear. Its languorous sense of ease, dangerously close to delusion, gives scope to Simone Schwarz-Bart's considerable gift for describing the trees and flowers of her native island. --Paul Theroux, The New York Times <br> <br> In a literary field saturated with messianic heroes, be they poetic or proletarian, The Bridge of Beyond plunges us into a fabulous story of women, the chronicle of a mythical line of matrons: the Lougandors. Yet something would be lacking if we saw it merely as, for example, a rewriting of [Jacques Roumain's] Masters of the Dew , where a family of women are playing their version of Manuel. In comparison with these pre-texts, Simone Schwarz-Bart innovates. She innovates by metamorphosing the Creole oral tradition. --Maryse Conde<br> <br> Her stories seem to gleam with the polish of re-telling and are a distillation of passion and experience in which every trace of whimsicality and affectation have been squeezed out by the knowledge of real suffering. The virtues are, of course, not [the character] Toussine's but the author's, but so natural is this that it is easy to forget that it is a work of fiction; it is a very fine achievement. -- The Irish Times <br> <br> The book's gift of life is so generous, and its imagery so scintillant...that we believe every word. --John Updike, The New Yorker <br> <br> There's magic, madness, glory, tenderness, above all abundant hope. -- Financial Times <br> <br> The language...is as luxuriant as the foliage of the Antilles. -- The Times (London)


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