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Faraway the Southern Sky by Joseph Andras
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Faraway the Southern Sky

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Faraway the Southern Sky by Joseph Andras
Paperback $17.95
May 21, 2024 | ISBN 9781804291719

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    May 21, 2024 | ISBN 9781804291719

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  • May 21, 2024 | ISBN 9781804291733

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Praise

“In this eloquent and impassioned novella, Andras charts a course through contemporary Paris in the footsteps of Vietnamese leader Hô Chí Minh … his flâneur’s chronicle builds to a richly layered and emotionally honest reckoning with the promises and failures of a great leader. Andras’s meditation strikes a nerve.”
—Starred Review, Publishers Weekly

“A buzzing, bustling, genre-blending book that balances fact and fiction … the most successful passages arise when Andras extracts truth from either fact or fiction to depict a more real-seeming person behind the historical giant, as when a young H? Chí Minh borrows Marx’s Capital from a Parisian library and, rather than peruse and annotate its pages, ‘the big book served as his pillow.'”
Kirkus Reviews

“More than a read. An experience.”
—K. M. Sandrick, Historical Novel Society

Faraway the Southern Sky, the title of which is derived from a poem Ho Chi Minh wrote in the ’40s, is an extraordinary literary achievement because it makes real and present the scuffling life and education of the very young man who grew up to be the old sage who inspired the chants of “Ho Ho Ho Chi Minh, NLF Is Gonna Win” 50 years after those days in Paris.”
—Bill Littlefield, Arts Fuse

“This brief but layered novel follows a nameless figure wandering around Paris searching for traces of Ho Chi Minh, who lived there as a young revolutionary, near the end of the First World War.”
—Briefly Noted Book Reviews, The New Yorker

“This brief novel is a lyrical reflection on a young man who would challenge two empires and, in doing so, change the world. It’s well worth the read.”
—Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch

“What makes Andras’s strolling story all his own is his zeal and yearning … The length of the book (less than 80 pages) keeps Andras’s narrative taut and focused enough to forgive its occasional moments of grandeur. Still, the proclamations are underlined by a sense of purpose: Andras wants his readers to join him in protest.”
—Kevin Lozano, The Washington Post

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