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Fiskadoro
Fiskadoro
Jan 18, 2025 8:17 AM

Author:Denis Johnson

Fiskadoro

'Daring and provocative... Startlingly original' New York Times

The nuclear holocaust has been and gone, and now everything is different. In Twicetown, once Key West, two missiles sit unexploded, objects of awe and indifference. Mr Cheung teaches the boy Fiskadoro to play the clarinet; Grandmother Wright, the oldest person in the world, endlessly relives the fall of Saigon; Cassius Clay Sugar Ray trades in radioactive artefacts. Boats go out to comb the sea for fish, and the sea keeps some of the men. Tossing fitfully in nightmares of forgotten wars, lazing in the tropical heat, the flotsam and jetsam of a lost civilization pursue their lives through a world of fractured memories. And they wait - for the Cubans to come, for the Quarantine to be lifted, for the god Quetzalcoatl, the god Bob Marley, the god Jesus to return and build their kingdoms.

From the author of Tree of Smoke, winner of the National Book Award for Fiction

Reviews

Wildly ambitious. . . Its strange, hallucinatory vision of America and modern history is never less than compelling

—— New York Times

A leap of the imagination. . . stunningly delivered

—— Los Angeles Times Book Review

Haunting. . .an eerie and powerful visionary novel

—— Boston Globe

Impressive...sharp and unnerving sensibility. James offers a captivating rendering of an animal's point of view. Assured and skillful

—— New York Times Book Review

Impressive

—— Tishani Doshi , Guardian

The Tusk That Did the Damage will leave you breathless as you follow three narrators across the wild plains of India. A poacher, a documentary filmmaker, and an elephant called Gravedigger all illuminate the complexities of the country and culture, and you’ll be stunned by the author’s portrayal of the magnificent, tusked animals central to the character’s lives

—— Time Out New York

Lusciously written... a thoroughly readable novel that refuses to provide a simplistic perspective on the brutality of elephant poaching

—— Metro

Heart-racingly paced...Narrated in part by a pachyderm, it paints a vivid picture of conservation and corruption..a story that moves...with grace and humour, as light-footed as a poacher

—— National Geographic Traveller

Ivory trading, poaching, an escaped elephant, a risky love affair, all set in rural South India and “blend[ing] the mythical and the political”—this novel seems to have it all

—— The Millions

Spectacular... Tania James is one of our best writers, and here she is at the height of her powers: brilliant, hilarious, capable of the most astonishing cross-cultural interspecies ventriloquies and acrobatic leaps of empathy. You will read this ravishing novel in an afternoon and immediately want to press it on your favorite people.

—— Karen Russell, author of Swamplandia!

With lyricism and suspense, Tania James animates the rural landscapes where Western idealism clashes with local reality... In James’ arrestingly beautiful prose, The Tusk That Did the Damage blends the mythical and the political to tell a wholly original, utterly contemporary story about the majestic animal, both god and menace, that has mesmerized us for centuries.

—— Book Riot

A bighearted, morally complex novel

—— San Francisco Chronicle

A remarkably accomplished novel

—— Mick Herron , Geographical

In The Tusk That Did the Damage, James grounds a moral investigation in fallible human (and animal) emotionality: her prose is simple and beautiful, and her characters, both human and pachyderm, are lovingly rendered.

—— Bustle

James is such a talented author; she manages to bring these disparate viewpoints together forming a meaningful narrative and an engrossing story culminating in an elegant ending

—— Sunriver Books

A novel of great moral intensity, with the pacing of a thriller. Everyone is implicated. Everyone is righteous. Tania James’ gift, her genius, is to turn this scenario into an occasion for grace.

—— Julie Otsuka, author of When the Emperor was Divine

This narrative braiding makes the book nearly impossible to put down. And especially given the cross-cultural, cross-species scope of James’s novel, the technique gets closer to how such events take place in our world...enthralling

—— LA Review of Books

[An] intriguing, tightly plotted story

—— Newsday

[A] layered, affecting novel

—— Washington Independent Review of Books

Told in a language that is both lyrical and stark The Tusk that Did the Damage should win Tania James praise and laurels from those readers who long for a more penetrating look at environmental issues and the moral questions which accompany them’.

—— Joe Phelan , Bookmunch
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