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The Marvelous Adventures of Pierre Baptiste: Father and Mother, First and Last
 
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The Marvelous Adventures of Pierre Baptiste: Father and Mother, First and Last [Hardcover]

Patricia Eakins , Donald Treadgold


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: New York University Press (May 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0814722091
  • ISBN-13: 978-0814722091
  • Product Dimensions: 2.2 x 1.4 x 0.2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 395 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,791,313 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

The trials of a genius trapped in bondage supplies the framework for Eakins's first novel (after the short story collection The Hungry Girls), which purports to be the adventure-filled autobiography of an 18th-century black youth born into slavery on a sugar plantation. The plantation master, an amateur naturalist named Dufay, recalls 10-year-old Pierre from labor in the cane fields to help him classify flora and fauna on the Caribbean island. Impressed by young Pierre's acumen, and by his good humorAhe nicknames him GoodyADufay allows the boy to learn to read and write. Pierre often sneaks into the master's library to pore over volumes of Plato, Descartes, Newton and Diderot. After encountering a noted philosopher's condescending description of "Negroes," Pierre sets out to create the definitive encyclopedia of African culture: "In so doing, I would open for inspection THE GENIUS OF MY PEOPLE, proving we who had been stolen from Guine? THE EQUALS IN EVERY RESPECT OF OUR MASTERS and DESERVING OF LIBERTY." Later, when Pierre (now married to the hideously ugly but loving plantation cook) refuses to sleep with Madame Dufay, she accuses him of rape; Pierre sets out to sea in a barrel addressed to France. After an arduous experience, he is washed ashore on an uninhabited island. Here the novel's brilliance begins to tarnish. Pierre's commentaries on his Caribbean life are often scathing, humorous and brutally heartbreaking, but alone on his island, Pierre waxes tediously philosophical, and his adventures become weird, indeed: he is impregnated by a mermaidlike creature, carries the results to term in his mouth and gives birth to four "philosofish," whom he proceeds to educate. Such over-the-top, magic-realist bizarreness detracts from, and almost capsizes, what is for the most part startlingly creative, memorable work. (May) FYI: This novel won the NYU Press Prize for Fiction; excerpts have appeared in the Paris Review and other literary journals.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Eakins' skill at spinning a tale and her love of language are obvious in this story of an eighteenth-century black slave who repeatedly defies convention and ultimately creates his own universe. Torn from his mother as an infant, Pierre is selected at age 10 to be his master's porter, thus gaining access to a library and becoming a self-educated man on the sugar plantation. He even successfully resists his master's attempt to breed him by selecting for his wife a woman known to be barren, as the result of horrific treatment at the hands of her previous owner. But when he deflects his mistress' advances, she threatens tortures worse than death, and he escapes from his island home by taking to sea in a barrel, thus embarking on fantastic adventures. The story is told in the style and language of the time and is studded with tales seemingly grounded in legend and myth. Eakins succeeds in her desire "to create stories that read as if they come from the body of lost history." Michele Leber

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A savory, exotic and most satisfying feast., July 1 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Marvelous Adventures of Pierre Baptiste: Father and Mother, First and Last (Hardcover)
After reading The Hungry Girls, I was hungry for more of Patricia Eakins' works. The Marvelous Adventures of Pierre Baptiste was a savory, exotic and most satisfying feast. It is a great pleasure to meet a mind of such imaginative brilliance, one which is able to cull from history, literature, science, myth, philosophy, religion and fantasy and create a tale of excitement, adventure, adversity, humor and humanity in which every line is a poetic gem. It brought to mind Rabelais, Borges, Heironymus Bosch but stands alone in its own originality. I loved this book and have recommended it to everyone I know who loves great literature. Brava, Patricia Eakins.
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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