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  • Arcadia Books

The Book of Chameleons

Jose Eduardo Agualusa

9 Reviews

Rated 0

Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), Crime & mystery, Fiction in translation, Society & culture: general, Folklore, myths & legends

Jose Eduardo Agualusa's brilliant debut novel about the transformative power of creativity, winner of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize

'Ingenious, consistently taut and witty' TLS

'Humorous and quizzical, with a light touch on weighty themes, the narrative darts about with lizard-like colour and velocity' Independent

'Strange, elliptical, charming' Guardian


'A poetic, beguiling meditation on truth and storytelling . . . from the dreamscapes of magical realism to a gripping political thriller and even a murder mystery' New Internationalist

Felix Ventura trades in memories, a slippery character selling new pasts to people whose bright futures lack only a good lineage, and wiping clean the slate of their identity.

In a narrative that darts between past and present Angola, a bookish albino man, a beautiful woman, a mysterious foreigner and a witty talking lizard come together to discover their real origins. For theirs is a world where the truth seems to shift from moment to moment and where history itself is up for grabs . . .

WINNER OF THE INDEPENDENT FOREIGN FICTION PRIZE

'A work of fierce originality' Independent


'Without doubt one of the most important Portuguese-language writers of his generation' ANTONIO LOBO ANTUNES


'Cross J. M. Coetzee with Gabriel Garcia Marquez and you've got Jose Eduardo Agualusa'
ALAN KAUFMAN

Translated from the Portuguese by Daniel Hahn

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Praise for The Book of Chameleons

  • Fierce originality, vindicating the power of creativity to transform the most sinister acts. Not since Gregor Samsa's metamorphosis have we had such a convincing non-human narrator, brought vividly home to us by Daniel Hahn

  • - Independent

  • Strange, elliptical, charming - Guardian

  • Humorous and quizzical, with a light touch on weighty themes, the narrative darts about with lizard-like colour and velocity

  • - Independent

  • Witty and perceptive. Agualusa has the distinction of being the first Angolan writer to be translated into English

  • - Herald

  • A curious tale of memory and how it can be shaped, threaded with literary nods, where dreams and reality interweave, and reality itself is interpreted in myriad ways . . . with truths shifting against a vividly drawn sense of place

  • - Metro

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