Amnesty

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Product Details
Price
$26.00  $24.18
Publisher
Scribner Book Company
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.1 X 1.1 inches | 1.05 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781982127244

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About the Author
Aravind Adiga was born in India in 1974 and attended Columbia and Oxford universities. He is the author of the novels Amnesty; Selection Day, now a series on Netflix; The White Tiger, which won the Man Booker Prize; and the story collection Between the Assassinations. He lives in Mumbai, India
Reviews
"A taut, thrillerlike novel... A well-crafted tale of entrapment, alert to the risk of exploitation that follows immigrants in a new country." --Kirkus, starred review
"Engrossing...vivid...Adiga's enthralling depiction of one immigrant's tough situation humanizes a complex and controversial global dilemma."
--Publishers Weekly

"Scrutinizes the human condition through a haves-vs.-have-not filter with sly wit and narrative ingenuity... Adiga's smart, funny, and timely tale with a crime spin of an undocumented immigrant will catalyze readers."
--Booklist

"Adiga's facility for the cadence and vernacular of street talk and self-talk gives voice, literally, to figures that are often unheard."
--Shelf Awareness
The Millions, Vulture, LitHub, and Buzzfeed's Most Anticipated of 2020

The New York Times Most Anticipated of February 2020

"I like to read Adiga's novels almost as much as the poet James Dickey liked to drink. He has more to say than most novelists, and about 50 more ways to say it... Adiga is a startlingly fine observer, and a complicator, in the manner of V.S. Naipaul... Reading him you get a sense of having your finger on the planet's pulse... This novel has a simmering plot...[but] you come to this novel for other reasons, notably for its author's authority, wit and feeling on the subject of immigrants' lives... Keep reading."
--The New York Times

"Searing, inventive ... Amnesty is Adiga's most accomplished novel yet, a gorgeously crafted page-turner with brains and heart, illuminating the courage of displaced peoples and the cruelties of those who conspire against them."
--Hamilton Cain, The Minneapolis Star Tribune

"What makes Amnesty an urgent and significant book is the generosity and the humanity of its vision. The abstract issue of immigration, fodder for cheap politics, comes starkly alive in the story of this one man, his past troubles and his present conflict. Amnesty is an ample book, pertinent and necessary. It speaks to our times."
--Juan Gabriel Vasquez, The New York Times Book Review

"Adiga shines when documenting the ways in which immigrants are marginalized by those who claim to care about them... Amnesty succeeds in wrenching attention toward systemic injustice."
--Kristen Millares Young, The Washington Post

"A universal story with particular relevance and urgency today."
--Parade

"A near-hallucinatory guided tour of Australia's largest city as observed by an endearing oddball who, out of necessity, keeps to the shadows... In fresh and playful prose...Adiga places you smack in the middle of Danny's buzzing mind... With its pleasurably off-kilter sympathies and style, Amnesty compellingly captures Danny's tricky plight."
--Michael Upchurch, The Seattle Times

"Adiga is one of the great observers of power and its deformities, showing in novels like his Booker Prize winning White Tiger and Last Man in Tower how within societies, the powerful lean on the less powerful, and the weak exploit the weaker all the way down. Telling the tale of Danny's immigration along the story of one tense day, he has built a forceful, urgent thriller for our times."
--John Freeman, Lit Hub Executive Editor

"Adiga's novel...takes the reader inside the cautious, furtive world of an undocumented immigrant who clings to hope but lives with so much fear and paranoia. In all of its minutiae and incredible detail, these pages call attention to the real heartbreak of undocumented people who dream of a better existence - not only in Australia but in the United States and elsewhere...the substance is so good - the premise of a day's moral tussling by an individual with so much at personal stake - and the writing is beautiful (at times lyrical)."
--Jennifer Forker, The Associated Press

"Amnesty is a story that will, with plenty of Adiga's trademark wit, force you to reckon with your own ethical code."
--Madison Malone Kircher, Vulture

"A work of deeply consequential fiction."
--BookPage, starred review

"Like Valeria Luiselli in Lost Children Archive, Adiga bears witness to the disruption, pain, and hardship inherent in needing to leave one's country and find refuge elsewhere. Highly recommended."
--Library Journal, starred review

"In this smart twist on a classic whodunit, Danny, undocumented and working as a house cleaner in Sydney after fleeing Sri Lanka, has information about an unsolved murder. He must decide whether to stay silent--or come forward and risk deportation."
--VanityFair