Men of maize

Miguel Angel Asturias

Book - 2024

"Deep in the mountain forests of Guatemala, a community of indigenous Mayans-the "men of maize"-serves as stewards to sacred corn crops. When outsiders encroach on their territory and threaten to abuse the fertile land, they enter a bloody struggle to protect their way of life. This 75th anniversary edition of Nobel Prize Winner Miguel Ángel Asturias's epic tale of the collision of capitalist exploitation and indigenous wisdom features a new introduction and a foreword by Pulitzer Prize winner Héctor Tobar"--

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FICTION/Asturias Miguel
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Asturias Miguel (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 4, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Magic realist fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Penguin Books 2024.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Miguel Angel Asturias (author)
Other Authors
Gerald Martin, 1944- (translator), Héctor Tobar (writer of foreword)
Item Description
"Originally published in Spanish as Hombres de maíz by Editorial Losada, Argentina."
Physical Description
pages ; cm
Awards
Nobel Prize in Literature, 1967.
ISBN
9780143138402
  • Gaspar Ilom
  • Machojón
  • The deer of the seven-fires
  • Colonel Chalo Godoy
  • María Tecun
  • Coyote-postman
  • Epilogue
  • Glossary.
Review by Library Journal Review

Penguin Classics follows its reprint of Asturias's debut political novel, Mr. President, with the Nobel Prize-winning Guatemalan author's 1949 masterpiece about the existential struggle between rapacious Westerners and their Ladino collaborators, intent on dominating and exploiting natural resources, and Native peoples who experience and participate in nature as a sacred whole. Asturias was inspired to recast French surrealism through Mayan myth and tradition and set the narrative in Guatemala's mountain forests, creating a uniquely Indigenous expression that situates his epic at the headwaters of Latin American magical realism, alongside Brazilian writer Mario Andrade's similarly inspired (though far less somber) Macunaíma. Swirling cascades of incantatory prose, lush with sensual impressions and dire mystical import, tell of the cruel fate of Gaspar Ilóm, scourge of the corn planters in life and in death. Readers follow the forlorn search of a blind husband for his lost wife and a postman's self-deliverance into the underworld, where he meets his nahual or animal spirit, a coyote. Translator Martin's thorough introduction (new to this edition) and abundant footnotes provide helpful explication of Mayan mythology and lifeways, but readers will be able to intuit much of this through the vivid imagery and rhythmic potency of Asturias's prose alone. VERDICT An extraordinary, incomparable work of world literature that requires and rewards multiple readings.

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