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Rebellion in the Backlands - Phoenix Books by Euclides Da Cunha Paperback
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Highlights
- An unforgettable epic history of war and rebellion that has been called "the Bible of Brazilian nationality.
- Author(s): Euclides Da Cunha
- 562 Pages
- History, Latin America
- Series Name: Phoenix Books
Description
Book Synopsis
An unforgettable epic history of war and rebellion that has been called "the Bible of Brazilian nationality."
Euclides da Cunha's classic account of the brutal campaigns against religious mystic Antonio Conselheiro has been praised by readers around the world as perhaps the greatest book ever written about Brazil. An epic of nonfiction that reads like a novel, it has been hailed by the likes of Stefan Zweig and Elizabeth Hardwick for its prose and its insights into the character of Brazil as the nation was being formed. Da Cunha tells the story of a guerrilla rebellion in the remote village of Canudos that fought the central government from 1893 to 1897, of the challenging conditions that led the people to revolt, and of the violent repression that resulted. A national epic like no other, Rebellion in the Backlands is a lasting classic, a book that has been handed from reader to reader for decades.
Review Quotes
"Our finest book."
--Agripino Grieco ""The Evolution of Brazilian Prose"""A great national epic. . . . A complete psychological picture of the Brazilian soil, the people, and the country, such as has never been achieved with equal insight and psychological perception. Comparable in world literature perhaps to The Seven Pillars of Wisdom."--Stefan Zweig
"Euclides da Cunha went on the campaigns [against Conselheiro] as a journalist and what he returned with and published in 1902 is still unsurpassed in Latin American literature. Cunha is a talent as grand, spacious, entangled with knowledge, curiosity, and bafflement as the country itself. . . . On every page there is a heart of idea, speculation, dramatic observation that tells of a creative mission undertaken, the identity of the nation, and also the creation of a pure and eloquent prose style."--Elizabeth Hardwick "Bartleby in Manhattan"