Synopses & Reviews
"This is what's always kept us together," said Jonty quietly. "It's the dream and the possibility that give meaning to Yearsonend. . . . For years now it hasn't been about gold . . . it's been about much more than that. . . . Take Mario Salviati, for instance: once the gold is found, the general will let him go. We'd be able to leave the past where it belongs. . . ."
Secrets abound in the South African Karoo -- a remote landscape of mountains and desert, where legend weaves its way into daily life. A fabulous merman sculpture miraculously appears one morning in the yard of eccentric artist Jonty Jack, and Ingi Friedlander, a young art curator for the National Gallery at Cape Town, comes to Yearsonend to buy the masterpiece. When Jonty refuses her offer, Ingi resolves to stay and win him over.
Intrigued by hints of the town's unusual history, Ingi persistently questions its inhabitants, who reveal that a mythical trove of gold is buried nearby. For several centuries gold fever has gripped the town and sent ripples of suspicion through those who live there. Tracing the roots of Yearsonend's violent and magical history of feuding families, troubled love, and corrosive greed, the narrative shuttles between the past and the present, linking two patriarchs with shadowy pasts, an earthy angel, a woman without a face, a ragtag band of soldiers, and a host of other colorful characters. As Ingi delves deeper into the mysteries of Yearsonend, she is inexplicably drawn to Mario Salviati, a deaf, dumb, and blind Italian stonecutter who holds the key to many of the town's secrets.
A spectacular climax sheds light on many unanswered questions, and Ingi and the Yearsonenders learn that they are searching not only for their past, but also for the promise of the future. With extraordinary imagination and lyricism, Etienne van Heerden captures the essence of a land steeped in myth, and of a culturally diverse people, for whom storytelling and history are inextricably linked. In the rich magic-realism tradition of One Hundred Years of Solitude, The Long Silence of Mario Salviati is an unforgettable journey toward understanding and inspiration.
Synopsis
Ingi Friedlander, a curator from the National Gallery at Cape Town, South Africa, goes to the remote mountain village of Yearsonend to buy a sculpture that has magically appeared overnight. Ingi soon discovers that the town is in the grip of gold fever for a trove that is buried somewhere nearby. She is drawn deeper into the mysteries of the town's past and slowly befriends Mario Salviati, the deaf, dumb, blind Italian immigrant who holds the key to many of the town's secrets. Ingi's persistent questions unlock intriguing answers in the Yearsonenders, and in herself.
In the vein of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, this beautifully written work of magical realism gives a sweeping and imaginative history of a South African town and an unforgettable journey toward freedom.
Synopsis
In the vein of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's "One Hundred Years of Solitude, " this beautifully written work of magical realism gives a sweeping and imaginative history of a South African town and an unforgettable journey toward freedom.
Synopsis
Ingi Friedlander, a curator from the National Gallery at Cape Town, South Africa, goes to the remote mountain village of Yearsonend to buy a sculpture that has magically appeared overnight. Ingi soon discovers that the town is in the grip of gold fever for a trove that is buried somewhere nearby. She is drawn deeper into the mysteries of the town' s past and slowly befriends Mario Salviati, the deaf, dumb, blind Italian immigrant who holds the key to many of the town' s secrets. Salviati confides in no one until the day of his death, when he leaves a stone with the map inscribed in it for Ingi. In a surprising twist, Ingi leaves both her job and the search for the treasure to pursue her true love, painting. As she leaves Yearsonend, she casts out the window the rock with the secret of the hidden gold. While her presence in the town has brought together people who have long fought over race and money, there is a complex combination of doubt about the people overcoming their differences and the history of apartheid, and an exhilarating sense of freedom and self-discovery which Ingi' s persistent questions have brought to the townspeople.
About the Author
Etienne van Heerden is an award-winning Afrikaans writer. A former advertising executive and attorney, he spent time in the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa and teaches at the University of Cape Town. He has been honored with every major South African prize for fiction, and his work has been translated into eleven languages. He lives in Stellenbosch, South Africa, with his wife and daughters.