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The Crime of Father Amaro

 

By New Directions
The Crime of Father Amaro
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Amazon
$11.63
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Latest $11.63   Latest $6.00   Latest $0.01  
Highest $14.71 Mar 2, '16   Highest $8.70 May 29, '14   Highest $3.73 Nov 18, '14  
Lowest $9.97 Oct 12, '14   Lowest $5.40 Aug 6, '15   Lowest $0.01 Dec 20, '15  
Average $12.18   Average $5.79   Average $0.71  
Added May 3, 2014   Added May 3, 2014   Added May 3, 2014  
                 
Historical Price
Amazon Best Sellers Rank
30 day average: 384,391 | 90 day average: 576,603

 

Product Description
An unflinching portrait of a priest who seduces his landlady's daughter, made into an acclaimed and controversial motion picture. Ea de Queirs''s novel is a lurid satire of clerical corruption in a town in Portugal (Leira) during the period before and after the 1871 Paris Commune. At the start, a priest physically explodes after a fish supper while guests at a birthday celebration are "wildly dancing a polka." Young Father Amaro (whose name means "bitter" in Portuguese) arrives in Leira and soon lusts afterand is lusted after bybudding Amelia, dewy-lipped, devout daughter of Sao Joaneira who has taken in Father Amaro as a lodger. What ensues is a secret love affair amidst a host of compelling minor characters: Canon Dias, glutton and Sao Joaneira's lover; Dona Maria da Assuncao, a wealthy widow with a roomful of religious images, agog at any hint of sex; Joao Eduardo, repressed atheist, free-thinker and suitor to Amelia; Father Brito, "the strongest and most stupid priest in the diocese;" the administrator of the municipal council who spies at a neighbor's wife through binoculars for hours every day. Ea's incisive critique flies like a shattering mirror, jabbing everything from the hypocrisy of a rich and powerful Church, to the provincialism of men and women in Portuguese society of the time, to the ineptness of politics or science as antidotes to the town's ills. What lurks within Ea's narrative is a religion of tolerance, wisdom, and equality nearly forgotten. Margaret Jull Costa has rendered an exquisite translation and provides an informative introduction to a story that truly spans all ages.

 

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