A God Strolling In the Cool of the Evening
1999 Nominated

A God strolling in the cool of the evening

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

It has fallen to Lucius Valerius Quincius, supreme magistrate of the city of Tarcisis, to hold back the forces of chaos. In the twilight years of the Roman empire, with the forbidden sect of Christianity mushrooming within the city walls, and the Moorish hordes threatening without, this man must uphold the standard of moral courage in a disintegrating world. Mário de Carvalho has spent most of his life in Lisbon. He has published novels, story collections and drama. A God Strolling in the Cool of Evening won the Pegasus Prize for Literature in 1996. The novel, an historical timeless tale on human nature, had excellent reviews, and is considered a classic in the genre.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Mário
de Carvalho

Mario de Carvalho was born in Lisbon, Portugal, 1944. He was part of the movement against the dictator Salazar. As a resistant he had an adventurous youth. While in the army, he was jailed, tortured and eventually escaped to Sweden. After the democratic Revolution, in 1974, he returned to Portugal and praticised law for many years. In 1981 he published his first book of novels and initialized a successfull writing carreer. He has published numerous novels, story collections and plays and has been widely translated.
Mario de Carvalho was born in Lisbon, Portugal, 1944. He was part of the movement against the dictator Salazar. As a resistant he had an adventurous youth. While in the army, he was jailed, tortured and eventually escaped to Sweden. After the democratic Revolution, in 1974, he returned to Portugal and praticised law for many years. In 1981 he published his first book of novels and initialized a successfull writing carreer. He has published numerous novels, story collections and plays and has been widely translated.

ABOUT
THE TRANSLATOR Gregory
Rabassa

Gregory Rabassa (1922-2016) was a prominent American translator known for his influential work in making Latin American literature accessible to English-speaking audiences. Born to a Cuban father and an American mother in Yonkers, New York, Rabassa was immersed in a rich linguistic environment that inspired his passion for languages. He began his formal studies in Romance languages at Dartmouth College and later earned his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University.

Gregory Rabassa (1922-2016) was a prominent American translator known for his influential work in making Latin American literature accessible to English-speaking audiences. Born to a Cuban father and an American mother in Yonkers, New York, Rabassa was immersed in a rich linguistic environment that inspired his passion for languages. He began his formal studies in Romance languages at Dartmouth College and later earned his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
United Kingdom
Publisher
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Translator
Gregory Rabassa

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