The Committed

The Committed

Viet Thanh Nguyen
Our Price:  £5.99
List Price:  £21.30
Saving Of:  72%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Viet Thanh Nguyen
Condition:  New
Format:  Hardback
Pages:  368
Publisher:  Black Cat
Year:  2021
ISBN:  9780802157065

It's the early 1980s and the Sympathizer arrives in Paris. As a refugee, he and his blood brother Bon try to escape their turbulent pasts by turning their hands to capitalism in one of its purest forms: drug dealing. No longer in physical danger, the Sympathizer is both charmed and disturbed by Paris. Falling in with left-wing intellectuals and politicians at dinner parties held by his French Vietnamese "aunt", he finds customers for his merchandise as well as stimulation for his mind. But this new life he's living has unforeseen dangers of oppression, addiction and the seemingly unresolvable paradox of reuniting his two closest friends, men whose world views stand them poles apart.

You may also like
Committed to Disillusion: Activist Writers in Egypt from the 1950s to the 1980s
David DiMeo
Condition: New
£21.75

Can a writer help to bring about a more just society? This question was at the heart of the movement of al-adab al-multazim, or committed literature, which claimed to dominate Arab writing in the mid-twentieth century. By the 1960s, however, leading Egyptian writers had retreated into disillusionment, ...


Theatres Of War: French Committed Theatre from the Second World War to the Cold War
Ted Freeman
Condition: New
£11.20

Theatres of War is the first full-length study to be devoted to the 'Committed' theatre that flourished in modern France from 1944 to the mid-1950s. During this crucial decade, authors responded to the issues of their time by contributing a number of tense controversial plays to a distinctive genre of realist theatre.


Theatres Of War: French Committed Theatre from the Second World War to the Cold War
Ted Freeman
Condition: New
£45.85

Theatres of War is the first full-length study to be devoted to the 'Committed' theatre that flourished in modern France from 1944 to the mid-1950s. During this crucial decade, authors responded to the issues of their time by contributing a number of tense controversial plays to a distinctive genre of realist theatre.