Glory

Available

Product Details

Price
$27.00  $25.11
Publisher
Viking
Publish Date
Pages
416
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.1 X 1.4 inches | 1.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780525561132

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About the Author

NoViolet Bulawayo is the author of We Need New Names, which was a finalist for the Booker Prize and won the PEN/Hemingway Award, the Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for fiction, and the Etisalat Prize for Literature. Bulawayo grew up in Zimbabwe, and now lives in the United States.

Reviews

PRAISE FOR GLORY

Manifoldly clever...brilliant... 'Glory' is its own vivid world, drawn from its own folklore. This is a satire with sharper teeth, angrier, and also very, very funny.
--Violet Kupersmith, The New York Times Book Review

A crackling political satire.
--The New York Times

Genius.
--#1 New York Times
bestselling author Jason Reynolds

Few writers possess a literary voice as inimitable as Bulawayo's...[The] dazzling voices of this novel will draw you deep into its ambitious and mystifying heart.
--Vulture

An absurd yet captivating examination of themes such as toxic masculinity, hero worship, and performative change.
--TIME

Bulawayo's storytelling gifts...are prodigious...Any satire worth its weight in talking animals is really a warning -- to the powers that be, the complicit and anyone who thinks nothing so terrible could ever happen to them...By almost any measure, 'Glory' weighs a ton.
--Washington Post

Bulawayo's chronicle of the new government's corruption and the old one's brutality dramatizes Zimbabwean history while also illuminating the challenges of many developing nations.
--The New Yorker

Glory goes beyond its immediate inspiration in how, despite the Zimbabwean particulars, it expresses a people's frustration, terror, resilience, uprising, and hope in a way that can be applied to a multitude of nations and political realities around the globe. Hope is not an easy thing...but, like Glory, it is indeed glorious in its power.
--NPR

[One of the] most anticipated books of 2022.
--Oprah Daily

'Glory' demonstrates what it is impossible to teach: there are no rules. Everything, even inconsistency, serves story. NoViolet Bulawayo joins writers like Ursula K Le Guin, Mohsin Hamid, and Colum McCann to revolutionize the possibilities of fiction. 'Glory' will give writers permission to break free from rigid etiquette and use the storytelling habits of the world, and the concerns of that world as their mise en scène. For that alone Bulawayo deserves all the available accolades.
--The Boston Globe

Inspired by Robert Mugabe's fall from power in 2017 and George Orwell's classic fable Animal Farm, Bulawayo satirizes the dysfunctional politics that curse so many African nations in this long-awaited sophomore effort after her 2013 Booker finalist debut, We Need New Names.
--Buzzfeed

With ingenuity and skill, Bulawayo masterfully controls her story.
--San Francisco Chronical

Imaginative, sweeping, hard-hitting, eye-opening, and unabashedly political, Glory is an important read.
--Washington Independent Review of Books

Throughout, Bulawayo keenly displays the perspectives of political players and the civilians who bear the brunt of their violence. With satire that feels necessary and urgent, Bulawayo brings clarity to a murky political morass.
--Publishers Weekly

Conjure[s] a mood of an epic folktale.
--Kirkus Reviews

Glory is like nothing we've read before. It's a strange, creative, experimental book that will take the reading world by storm, a satire grounded in hope.
--Book Riot

With its entirely nonhuman cast of horses, goats, donkeys, dogs, cats and cattle and its merciless focus on politics, NoViolet Bulawayo's novel Glory is bound to evoke George Orwell's Animal Farm for many readers. But this is no reboot. Beyond those broad similarities, Bulawayo's story is her own.
--Tampa Bay Times

A surreal venture that lays the struggles of social upheaval bare.
--Leanne Butkovic, Thrillist

Inspired by the fall of Robert Mugabe, [Glory] promises an incisive parable for our times.
--Tom Beer

Bulawayo's writing is a performance. Colorful, poetic, comedic. Like a masquerade, her writing dances in a blend of contrasts. Her animal characters have no problem piling on their adjectives and stacking variations of the same imagery to create delightful sonic and visual patterns.
--Brittle Paper

PRAISE FOR NOVIOLET BULAWAYO

A deeply felt and fiercely written debut novel . . . The voice Ms. Bulawayo has fashioned for [Darling] is utterly distinctive - by turns unsparing and lyrical, unsentimental and poetic, spiky and meditative.
--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

A gifted writer.
--New York Times Book Review

NoViolet Bulawayo does not shrink away from anything... [She] writes with poignant clarity and hard-hitting imagery.
--New York Daily News

The Booker Prize-shortlisted author of We Need New Names returns with a novel inspired by the fall of Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe in 2017. Described as an 'anthropomorphic allegory' in the tradition of Animal Farm, Bulawayo's tale of dictatorship and oppression explores the exaltation and downfall of a would-be savior.
--Oprah Daily

[Bulawayo's] prose is warm and clear and unfussy...Her hard, funny first novel is a triumph.
--Entertainment Weekly

Her gift as a visual storyteller should propel her to a bright future.
--USA Today

Bulawayo's meditations on displacement and belonging have already garnered widespread critical praise and comparisons to the likes of Zadie Smith and J. M. Coetzee... Bulawayo mixes imagination and reality, combining an intuitive attention to detail with startling, visceral imagery... This book is a provocative, haunting debut from an author to watch.
--Elle