The Jaguar's Roar
A Novel
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
An American Booksellers Association's Indie Next Great Read (December 2025) The story of an Indigenous girl’s kidnapping during a colonial expedition intertwines with a young woman’s modern-day search for identity and ancestral truths.
In 1817, two German scientists traveled across Brazil and into the Amazon gathering flora and fauna to study and display in Europe. Among the collection they brought to the Bavarian court were two Indigenous children.
The children’s images became widespread, satisfying European curiosity about the distant land they came from. But little was known about the children themselves. Despite the scientists’ detailed records about many of the plant and animal specimens, they only noted the children’s tribes: the girl was a Miranha, and the boy, a Juri. After a few months, the children died in Germany, far from anyone who knew their names.
The Jaguar’s Roar, a spellbinding poetic novel told in many voices, imagines the children’s journey and a modern Brazilian woman’s effort to counter their disappearance from history.
In her award-winning fifth novel, Micheliny Verunschk inhabits the fictional perspective of the Miranha girl, of the jaguar she conjures for protection, of the German scientists who determine her fate, and of the two rivers that frame her life. Intertwined in this narrative is a story of Brazil’s suppression of its Indigenous history, and of a young woman named Josefa, a newcomer unmoored in the megacity of São Paulo, who identifies with the girl after seeing her image in an exhibit and tries to recover the child’s voice and story.
In Juliana Barbassa’s vivid translation, Verunshuk’s lyrical sentences carry the reader through a powerful exploration of memory, colonialism, and belonging, and make a lasting contribution to world literature.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Brazilian writer Verunschk reckons with her country's colonial history in her vital English-language debut, which was inspired by the true story of two Indigenous children who were taken to Germany in 1820. The story unfolds from the perspective of Iñe-e, a 12-year-old girl brought to Munich by German naturalists Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius and Johann Baptist von Spix along with an unnamed Juri boy. Far from home, Iñe-e feels like she is dying because she can no longer hear the natural world speaking to her, and she and the Juri boy are greeted with dehumanizing curiosity and revulsion by the Bavarian royal court. Then Munich's Isar river begins speaking to her "incessantly, as all water will," interspersing stories about German history with spiritual pronouncements ("I know heaven and earth and share the language that flows through all water"). Iñe-e also has visions of a jaguar who beckons her to a new kind of life. It's often not clear what's happening, but Verunschk capably renders an animistic experience of the world. Patient readers will appreciate this polyphonic attempt to give voice to the voiceless.