Sorrow of the Earth
Eric Vuillard, Ann Jefferson
£12.99
Description
Buffalo Bill was the prince of show business. His spectacular Wild West shows were performed to packed houses across the world, holding audiences spellbound with their grand re-enactments of tales from the American frontier. For Bill gave the crowds something they’d never seen before: real-life Indians.
This astonishing work of historical re-imagining tells the little-known story of the Native Americans swallowed up by Buffalo Bill’s great entertainment machine. Of chief Sitting Bull, paraded in theatres to boos and catcalls for fifty dollars a week. Of a baby Lakota girl, found under her mother’s frozen body, adopted and displayed on the stage. Of the last few survivors of Wounded Knee, hired to act out the horrific massacre of their tribe as entertainment. And of Buffalo Bill Cody himself, hamming it to the last, even as it consumed him.
Told with beauty, compassion and anger, Sorrow of the Earth shows us tragedy turned into a circus act, history into sham, truth into a spectacle more powerful than reality itself. Could any of us turn away?
‘One of the jewels of the literary season’ Le Figaro
‘An astonishing work’ Lire
Born in Lyons in 1968, Eric Vuillard is a French author and film director. His books include Conquistadors (winner of the Ignatius J. Reilly prize 2010), and La Bataille de l’occident and Congo, which were jointly awarded the 2012 Franz-Hessel prize and the 2013 Valery-Larbaud prize. Sorrow of the Earth is the first of his titles to be translated into English.
Publisher Review
A swift and engrossing postmodern interrogation of the brutal cost of manufacturing myth… an attempt to see a fraction of the story of native North America more honestly than that story has been seen in decades and centuries past New Statesman This remarkable book comes from an angry man, wielding his pen with great skill… This powerful story, blending the grand sweep of history with everyday detail, images with text, personal reflections with brute facts, and poetry with prose, makes us reconsider our own relationship with history La Croix A short and scintillating book Le Soir One of our finest writers Le Nouvel observateur A great book… Vuillard forges a sensitive and gripping tale from one of American history’s most well-known stories: how a nation was built on a lie, transforming a massacre into a battle, inventing show business and substituting carnival for history. It is simple and moving, incisive and poetic — Francois Busnel Lire An astonishing work… With chapters that are as brief as they are gripping Lire One of the jewels of the literary season Le Figaro Magazine
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