Adam & Eve in Paradise

Eça de Queirós, 1845-1900

Book - 2025

"Gloriously translated by Margaret Jull Costa, Adam and Eve in Paradise is not the rosy prelapsarian tale of your childhood Bible: yellow-eyed Adam is a slope-browed Neanderthal all alone and panicked, and Paradise is abominable (seethingly alive with vicious insects and roving primordial carnivores). Luckily for Adam, Eve appears: "O wonder, there before Adam, as if it were both him and not him, was another Being very similar to him, only more slender and covered with a more silken down, and who was regarding him with wide, lustrous, liquid eyes ... And slowly, gently rubbing its bare knees together, the whole of this silken, tender Being was offering itself up in astonished, lascivious submission. It was Eve ... It was you, O Ve...nerable Mother!" But still we must pity poor Adam and Eve: "Our Parents' tireless, desperate efforts were devoted entirely to surviving in the midst of a Nature that was ceaselessly, furiously plotting their destruction. And Adam and Eve spent those days - which Semitic texts celebrate as delightful - always trembling, always whimpering, always fleeing!" Eça de Queirós's pleasure in the glories of language and his delight in skewering all complacencies are richly palpable, leaving the reader smiling and sighing: Ahhh, those Genesiac days ..."--

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Subjects
Genres
Bible fiction
Published
New York : New Directions Publishing 2025.
Language
English
Portuguese
Main Author
Eça de Queirós, 1845-1900 (author)
Other Authors
Margaret Jull Costa (translator)
Item Description
"A New Directions Paperbook original"
"Originally published in Portuguese as Adão e Eva no Paraíso"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780811239141
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The narrator of this superb and archly satirical 1897 novella by Eça de Queirós (The Illustrious House of Ramires) casts the biblical Paradise as a terrifying wilderness. Adam, "father of Mankind," is a hirsute brute, "a truly alarming sight." Endowed with consciousness by God on the 28th day of creation, Adam leaves the bliss of the treetops and wanders into a scary world of mastodons, pterodactyls, and wolves. After eating meat for the first time and dozing off, he wakes to find Eve, apparently offering herself to him in "astonished, lascivious submission." As they struggle to survive in the wilderness, Adam and Eve accidentally invent weapons, learn to make fire, and adopt a puppy, in a hilariously sped-up version of human evolution mostly driven by Eve's civilizing instincts. Eça de Queirós pokes fun at religion, history, and science, locating Eden in "the grasslands of the Euphrates, or possibly in darkest Ceylon, or among the four clear rivers that now water Hungary, or even in the blessed land" of Lisbon. In the author's funhouse version of Genesis, the orangutans may be happier than man, despite the "many gifts that God gave us." This is sublime. (Feb.)

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