Speak No Evil

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Product Details
Price
$18.99
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publish Date
Pages
240
Dimensions
5.2 X 7.9 X 0.6 inches | 0.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780061284939

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About the Author

Uzodinma Iweala received the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award, and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, all for Beasts of No Nation. He was also selected as one of Granta's Best Young American Novelists. A graduate of Harvard University and the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, he lives in New York City and Lagos, Nigeria.

Reviews

"Iweala is a unique and surprising writer....[His] forceful writing, defined by sentences of only a handful of words that move at an accelerated clip, shines when he digs into Niru's psyche. He has a rare gift for capturing stream-of-consciousness thought, tackling it at a pace that's quick but authentic." -- Entertainment Weekly

"Iweala writes with such ease about adolescents and adolescence that Speak No Evil could well be a young adult novel. At the same time, he toys with other well-defined forms: the immigrant novel, the gay coming-of-age novel, the novel of being black in America. The resulting book is a hybrid of all these. If he's something of a remix artist, Iweala remains faithful to the conventions of these forms, a writer so adept that the book's climax feels both surprising and wholly inevitable." -- New York Times Book Review

"Speak No Evil is the rarest of novels: the one you start out just to read, then end up sinking so deeply into it, seeing yourself so clearly in it, that the novel starts reading you." -- Marlon James, Booker Award-winning author of A Brief History of Seven Killings

"How would Iweala top [Beasts of No Nation]? The answer is by moving us to a different kind of war zone.... Though the destination of this story is tragically unsurprising, it has the stomach-churning pace of a Greek tragedy. Iweala's scope is modest -- those handful of streets, 10 or so scenes, a couple of hundred pages -- but the novel burns with teenage intensity." -- The Financial Times

"The classic coming-out narrative describes how the central character makes a leap from one identity to another, into a different, freer life, while the classic immigrant novel depicts what it's like to straddle two worlds, old and new, with a foothold in each. Speak No Evil is both and neither.... The soul of Speak No Evil is the tortuous, exquisitely rendered relationship between Niru and his father." -- The New Yorker

"A lovely slender volume that packs in entire worlds with complete mastery. Speak No Evil explains so much about our times and yet is never anything less than a scintillating, page-turning read." -- Gary Shteyngart, author of Little Failure

"An evocative narrative and stark dialogue keeps Uzodinma Iweala's Speak No Evil from a single dull moment.... His characters' rawness and beauty overwhelm page by page, looping their two stories into one heartbreaking narrative, one that embodies and echoes the pains of current, broader inequalities." -- AV Club

"A timely story of friendship, secrets, and consequences." -- Vogue

"A wrenching, tightly woven story about many kinds of love and many kinds of violence. Speak No Evil probes deeply but also with compassion the cruelties of a loving home. Iweala's characters confront you in close-up, as viscerally, bodily alive as any in contemporary fiction." -- Larissa MacFarquhar

"Iweala unwinds crucial issues of choice and the burden of playing multiple parts; says Niru, 'It's too confusing for me to live all these lives when I want only one.' Throughout a narrative spiraling toward tragedy, Niru's pain is so palpable it will make you gasp.... Highly recommended." -- Library Journal, starred review

"In Uzodinma's staggering sophomore novel (after Beasts of No Nation), the untimely disclosure of a secret shared between two teens from different backgrounds sets off a cascade of heartbreaking consequences.... Speaks volumes about white heterosexual privilege.... Notable both for the raw force of Iweala's prose and the moving, powerful story." -- Publishers Weekly, starred review

"A searing take on the notion of home, and the struggle to be at home with oneself.... Speak No Evil deals with less epic subject matter [than Beasts of No Nation], but there's subtle power in its intimacy and in its depictions of the violence we do to each other and to ourselves." -- Seattle Times

"Portraying cross-generational and -cultural misunderstandings with anything but simplicity, Iweala tells an essential American story." -- Booklist, starred review

"Heart-wrenching .... A visceral but compassionate portrait of what it means to be different within a family, let alone society at large." -- Washington Blade

"Iweala stirringly brings to life a young man at war with himself in this moving new novel.... Speak No Evil isn't an easy read. It is, however, compelling, sensitively told, and satisfying." -- Lambda Literary

"A haunting story about identity and power." -- Paste Magazine