The Farm
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Closely knit Colombian siblings' internal rifts threaten to tear apart the hard-won legacy their father fought to establish against guerilla and paramilitary violence. An intimate and transgressive novel that confirms Héctor Abad as one of the great writers of Latin American literature today.
Pilar, Eva, and Antonio Ángel are the last heirs of La Oculta, a farm hidden in the mountains of Colombia. The land has survived several generations. It is the landscape of their happiest memories but it is also where they have had to face the siege of violence and terror, restlessness and flight.
In The Farm, Héctor Abad illuminates the vicissitudes of a family and of a people, as well as of the voices of these three siblings, recounting their loves, fears, desires, and hopes, all against a dazzling backdrop. We enter their lives at the moment when they are about to lose the paradise on which they built their dreams and their reality.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A history of Colombia in miniature, Abad's arresting novel (after the memoir Oblivion) tells the story of La Oculta, a farm hidden in the mountains outside Medell n that has weathered guerilla and paramilitary violence but whose future is anything but secure. After the death of their mother, three siblings are reunited at La Oculta in order to determine its fate while reckoning with the personal differences that threaten to tear them apart. To o, a gay violinist and amateur poet and historian, is summoned back to Colombia from New York and becomes obsessed with exploring the history of his family. He is met by his older sister, Pilar, a corpse dresser possessing an almost supernatural relationship with the dead who have drowned in the farm's river, whose son Lucas was once kidnapped and held by guerillas for a year. To o and Pilar's sister, Eva, is traumatized by a past episode in which the farm was nearly burned to the ground by a criminal organization called El M sico. During their time on the farm, the siblings tidy up and discuss their heritage through the farm and their own personal experiences, while the threat of violence lurks in the background. Abad's novel occasionally drags, but it's a brilliant lesson in Colombian history, as it fluctuates between past, "nonexistent future, which is over for us or ending," and "the present, the here and now, in these few moments of life left to us."