Chtělo by to nový jména

Hardcover, 224 pages

Czech language

Published 2015 by Odeon.

ISBN:
978-80-207-1616-3
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4 stars (8 reviews)

Originální vyprávění začíná ve slumu v africkém Harare: desetiletá dívka pojmenovaná Miláček má různé kamarády – jmenují se třeba Bastard, Bůhví, Stina. Jejich otcové, případně oba rodiče se povětšinou kamsi vypařili. Jedna dívka je těhotná. Kradou ovoce, hrají si s odpadky. A hlavně sní o tom, že se jim podaří někam odjet, do Ameriky, do Evropy. Miláček má štěstí, jí a její matce se to podaří díky tetičce v Detroitu. Jenomže idealistické představy dítěte jsou jedna věc – a špinavé velkoměsto zasažené hospodářskou krizí věc druhá… Debut třiatřicetileté autorky, s nímž se dostala až do finále Bookerovy ceny.

11 editions

Review of 'We Need New Names' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

NoViolet Bulawayo (1981) was in 2013 de eerste Afrikaanse vrouw op de shortlist van de Booker Prize met haar debuutroman We need new names, dat voortbouwt op haar korte verhaal Hitting Budapest. Het is geschreven vanuit de ogen van Darling, een kind dat in Zimbabwe op straat opgroeit en later op een toeristenvisum naar haar tante in Detroit emigreert.

Look at them leaving in droves, the children of the land, just look at them leaving in droves. Those with nothing are crossing borders. Those with strength are crossing borders. Those with ambitions are crossing borders. Those with hopes are crossing borders. Those with loss are crossing borders. Those in pain are crossing borders. Moving, running, emigrating, going, deserting, walking, quitting, flying, fleeing – to all over, to countries near and far, to countries unheard of, to countries whose names they cannot pronounce.

Darlings leefwereld is ijzersterk beschreven: in …

Review of 'We Need New Names' on 'GoodReads'

3 stars

Some outstanding passages (the entire chapter 'How They Lived' is remarkable) From shanty towns in Zimbabwe to wealth and ruin in Michigan, the story observes society and humanity through the eyes of a child. This 'child's-eye' formula is the only weakness in this story, with unsophisticated, blundering sections of naivete interrupting some excellent social observation and philosophy, and some great writing.

Review of 'We Need New Names' on 'GoodReads'

5 stars

I read this in two big gulps over two days -- unprecedented, when it often takes me weeks to finish a regular sized novel. I've been having a hard time finding interesting books for my "no white dudes and preferable queer and or trans and or women of colour" reading goals at my small library (3/4 of the fiction is french) and so I snatched this up when I saw it, being something that I've heard high praise for, and then it snatched up my heart and I haven't been able to work on anything I should be doing because I have been reading and now I have that horrible pit in my stomach when a book guts you and I don't know what to do about it. Bulawayo's characters' voices cut me deep but also held me at arms length, lest I lapsed into the pity-voyeurism of white north …

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Subjects

  • Zimbabweans
  • Families
  • Emigration and immigration
  • Political violence
  • Girls
  • Fiction
  • Family life
  • Coming of age
  • Domestic fiction
  • Terrorism
  • Immigration and emigration
  • Fiction, family life
  • Africa, fiction
  • Fiction, cultural heritage
  • Children
  • Zimbabwean fiction (English)

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