People from Bloomington
By Budi Darma
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
By Budi Darma
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
By Budi Darma
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
By Budi Darma
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
By Budi Darma
Read by Nathan Agin, Mark Bramhall, Chris Andrew Ciulla, Langston Darby, Sunil Malhotra, Reynaldo Piniella, Eric Sharp, Emiko Susilo and Tiffany Tsao
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
By Budi Darma
Read by Nathan Agin, Mark Bramhall, Chris Andrew Ciulla, Langston Darby, Sunil Malhotra, Reynaldo Piniella, Eric Sharp, Emiko Susilo and Tiffany Tsao
Foreword by Intan Paramaditha
Introduction by Tiffany Tsao
Translated by Tiffany Tsao
Category: Classic Fiction | Short Stories
Category: Classic Fiction | Short Stories
Category: Short Stories | Audiobooks
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$14.00
Apr 12, 2022 | ISBN 9780143136606
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Apr 12, 2022 | ISBN 9780525508106
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Apr 12, 2022 | ISBN 9780593558034
449 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
“First published in Indonesia 40 years ago, this story collection from celebrated author Darma gets a second life—and an English translation—as a Penguin Classic. Across seven stories set in the gridded streets and rented rooms of Bloomington, Ind., Darma’s characters navigate their morbidly funny lives in this meditation on alienation, failed connection, and the universal strangeness of the human mind.”
—The Millions
“Despite his assertion that that the characters from People from Bloomington could have been drawn from any place in the world, Darma perceived, as an outsider, an emerging attitude towards the recluses on the edges of an ordinary Midwestern city. People from Bloomington feels like a report from the early days of the great American unwinding of civic responsibility and sense of interconnectedness. His characters are unsettling because they are recognizable—if not in our communities, then in ourselves. Darma doesn’t let us look away.”
—David Kobe, The Rumpus
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