Description
In Wild, Cheryl Strayed writes of The Ten Thousand Things Each of Dermo t's sentences came at me like a soft knowing dagger, depicting a far-off land that felt to me like the blood of all the places I used to love." And it's true, The Ten Thousand Things is at once novel of shimmering strangeness--and familiarity. It is the story of Felicia, who returns with her baby son from Holland to the Spice Islands of Indonesia, to the house and garden that were her birthplace, over which her powerful grandmother still presides. There Felicia finds herself wedded to an uncanny and dangerous world, full of mystery and violence, where objects tell tales, the dead come and go, and the past is as potent as the present. First published in Holland in 1955, Maria Dermo t's novel was immediately recognized as a magical work, like nothing else Dutch--or European--literature had seen before. The Ten Thousand Things is an entranced vision of a far-off place that is as convincingly real and intimate as it is exotic, a book that is at once a lament and an ecstatic ode to nature and life.
Author: Maria Dermout
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Published: 07/31/2002
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.49lbs
Size: 7.94h x 5.02w x 0.49d
ISBN13: 9781590170137
ISBN10: 159017013X
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
- Fiction | Sagas
- Fiction | Magical Realism
About the Author
Maria Dermoût (1888-1962) was born on a sugar plantation in the Dutch East Indies and educated in Holland. She then returned to the Indies with her husband, a jurist, and spent thirty years living in, she later wrote, "every town and wilderness of the islands of Java, Celebes, and the Moluccas." In 1951, at the age of sixty-three, Dermoût published her first book, a memoir called Yesterday. Her celebrated novel The Ten Thousand Things was published in 1955.

