Serengotti

$32.99

ISBN: 9780645565362 Format: Trade Paperback (234mm X153mm) 288pp Rights: World Release / Publication Date: 01 /08 /2023
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Description

Shortlisted for The Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards 2024 Finalist – Foreword Book of the Year

In the one tumultuous day, Ch’anzu loses hir job and finds wife Scarlet in bed with a stranger. As life unexpectedly spirals out of control, Ch’anzu turns to hir charismatic Aunt Maé for comfort and wisdom, and makes the bold move to work on a project in Serengotti, a migrant African outpost in rural Australia.

In a novel haunted by the strangeness and yearnings of a displaced community – both beautiful and fractured – Ch’anzu is forced to confront hir many demons. Back in the city, brother Tex  has gone missing. In Serengotti violence and infidelity simmer.

This is a novel bathed in sensuous, original language, a love letter to the strong women who bind families together despite everything. It’s also a tender remembrance of the many who haven’t or couldn’t survive the dislocations and tragedies of their turbulent pasts.

‘Thrillingly alive, visceral, funny, and poetic, this is a story of what happens after your world falls apart, and you are forced to piece together a new one—a bittersweet tale of love, desire and kin, of what we carry and what holds us afloat. A novel that dances with a haunted grace, with characters who will sear themselves into your memory.’ —DAVID CARLIN, award-winning author and editor of eight books, including The After-Normal, Our Father Who Wasn’t There and A–Z of Creative Writing Method

Such an imaginative use of words. Serengotti. And funny and sad and angry and loving and forgiving and true and everything that a book should be. I felt like I had stepped into a slice of Afro-Australia that was completely new, but intriguing and beguiling, and I really didn’t want the journey to end. Ch’anzu is really worth discovering. —Craig Cormick OAM, Australian science communicator and award-winning author of Unwritten Histories and A Funny Thing Happened at 27,000 Feet…