The Eternal Son
Cristovão Tezza
Winner, São Paulo Art Critics’ Association Award for that year’s best work of fiction, the Jabuti Prize, the Bravo! Award, the Portugal–Telecom Award, the São Paulo Literature Award, and the Zaffari & Bourbon Award, all for best novel or work of fiction
'Often confronting and uncomfortable, The Eternal Son explores lives and emotions rarely touched on. Significantly, Tezza does so without wallowing in pity or in a self-righteous sense of overcoming adversity.'
Jose Borghino (The Australian)In this multi-award-winning autobiographical novel, Cristovão Tezza draws his readers into the mind of a young father whose son, Felipe, is born with Down syndrome. From the initial shock of diagnosis, and through his growing understanding of the world of hospitals and therapies, Tezza threads the story of his son’s life with his own.
Felipe, who lives in an eternal present, becomes a remarkable young man; for Tezza, however, the story is a settling of accounts with himself and his own limitations and, ultimately, a coming to terms with the sublime ironies and arbitrariness of life. He struggles with the phantom of shame, as if his son’s condition were an indication of his own worth, and yearns for a ‘normal’ world that is always out of reach.
Reading this compelling book is like stumbling through a trap door into the writer’s mind, where nothing is censored, and everything is constantly examined and reinterpreted. What emerges is a hard-won philosophy of everyday life.
It is extraordinary to encounter a common human drama — the birth of a disabled child — investigated profoundly by a father who happens to be a gifted writer. The Eternal Son is an honest and insightful story by one of Brazil’s foremost contemporary novelists, here beautifully translated by Alison Entrekin. It is world literature at its finest.
Cristovão Tezza
Cristovão Tezza, one of Brazil’s foremost contemporary novelists, was born in 1952. He has published thirteen novels, including O Filho Eterno (The Eternal Son), which won every major literary prize in Brazil in 2008 and has been translated into seven languages. He was also the recipient of the Brazilian National Library Award in 1998 and the Brazilian Academy of Letters Award in 2004.
Additionally, he taught Portuguese at the Federal University of Paraná, and has published textbooks and articles in a number of magazines and newspapers. He is presently working on a book of short stories. Tezza lives in Curitiba, in the south of Brazil.
Alison Entrekin
Alison Entrekin has translated a number of works by Brazilian and Portuguese authors into English, including City of God by Paulo Lins and Budapest by Chico Buarque, which was shortlisted for the 2005 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize in the UK. Originally from Australia, she now lives in Brazil.
Website: http://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/AlisonEntrekin/