Half-Blood Blues
First edition cover of Canadian release | |
Author | Esi Edugyan |
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Country | Canada |
Subject | Blues music meets Nazi ideals in 1939 Berlin |
Genre | Fiction, book[1] |
Publisher | Serpent’s Tail |
Publication date | June, 2011[2] |
Media type | Print (hardcover & paperback) |
Pages | 343 pp. |
ISBN | 9781846687754 |
Half-Blood Blues (styled without the hyphen in the UK edition) is a fictional work written by Canadian writer Esi Edugyan, and first published in June 2011 by Serpent’s Tail. The book's dual narrative centers around Sidney "Sid" Griffiths, a journeyman blues bassist. Griffiths' friend and bandmate, Hieronymus "Hiero" Falk, is caught on the wrong side of 1939 Nazi ideology, and is essentially lost to history. Some of his music does survive, however, and half a century later, fans of Falk discover his forgotten story.[3]
Background
Half-Blood Blues is Edugyan’s second novel. It was first released in the United Kingdom in June 2011.[4] Edugyan's Canadian publisher had agreed to release the book in Canada four months earlier, but subsequently went bankrupt. Thomas Allen Publishers stepped in and released the first printing in August 2011, several months behind schedule.[4] By the year's end, Half-Blood Blues was highly acclaimed, and had garnered prestigious literary awards.[5]
Synopsis
The book follows a jazz bassist named Sidney "Sid" Griffiths and his bandmates, from the blues music scene in 1939 Berlin and Paris into the 1940s, when Griffiths and his friends attempt to flee the impending peril that looms over Germany. Racial hatred is in vogue, and a mixed-race German citizen (dubbed by the Nazis with the epithet "Rhineland Bastard") like Hiero Falk can be arrested and simply disappear, lost to history. Juxtaposed against this is another narrative, set in 1992. Sid and Chip re-unite and travel back to Berlin for the screening of the documentary about Hiero Falk, and in which both Sid and Chip appear. Watching their life on the big screen turns out to be somewhat different than they expected, and the mysterious letter that Chip has received leads them to another journey, across countries, time, and their own emotions.[3][6]
Reception
Paste Magazine called the book "an improbable but gripping tale",[6] while Quill & Quire called it a "ballsy narrative; ... brave, explosive, ... and too rare."[3]
The novel was selected for inclusion in the 2014 edition of CBC Radio's Canada Reads, where it was defended by Donovan Bailey.
Awards and honours
Half-Blood Blues won the prestigious Scotiabank Giller Prize in 2011,[3] and received shortlist honours for both the 2011 Man Booker Prize and the 2012 Orange Prize for Fiction. The book also was a nominee for the 2011 Governor General's Awards and the 2011 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize.[1]
References
- 1 2 Goodreads, Half-Blood Blues, Book review, Retrieved December 10, 2012
- ↑ Esi Edugyan Retrieved December 31, 2012
- 1 2 3 4 Wiersema, Robert, November 2011, Half-Blood Blues, Quill & Quire, Book review, Retrieved December 11, 2012
- 1 2 Blues’ dues: Esi Edugyan’s second novel went from shelved to success
- ↑ Woods, Stuart, November 9, 2011Edugyan’s unpredictable year culminates in Giller win, Quill & Quire, Retrieved December 11, 2012
- 1 2 Al-Shawaf, Rayyan, May 15, 2012, Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan : "Lady sings the Half-Blood Blues", Paste Magazine, Retrieved December 11, 2012
External links
- Esi Edugyan, Home page, Retrieved December 10, 2012
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