The Most Secret Memory of Men
By Mohamed Mbougar Sarr
Translated by Lara Vergnaud
By Mohamed Mbougar Sarr
Translated by Lara Vergnaud
By Mohamed Mbougar Sarr
Translated by Lara Vergnaud
By Mohamed Mbougar Sarr
Translated by Lara Vergnaud
Category: Literary Fiction
Category: Literary Fiction
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$19.99
Sep 26, 2023 | ISBN 9781635423273
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Sep 26, 2023 | ISBN 9781635423280
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Praise
“A rollicking literary mystery…an aerobatic feat of narrative invention, whirling between noir, fairy tale, satire, and archival fiction in its self-reflexive meditation on the nature of literary legend…propulsive.” —The New Yorker
“[The Most Secret Memory of Men] travels through space and time, from contemporary Paris to postwar Argentina to a Senegalese village. Besides the main narrator, a collection of voices complement one another to form an overall story, as one of the novel’s main goals is to put different realities and traditions ‘on the same level.’” —New York Times
“Sarr’s dizzying display of reference…plays a witty game with French and world literature…This effervescence is infectious and casts its charm in times nostalgic for a belief in books and the communities they create.” —Times Literary Supplement
“Captivating, precise, sensual prose. A book that will stir your emotions and make you think. A love letter to literature, this novel is already a classic and it will haunt you.” —Leïla Slimani, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Perfect Nanny
“Brilliantly executed…a rich narrative about art as a lasting marker of ephemeral individual existence. Literary mystery fans will be captivated.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Sarr investigates with keen psychological detail…[The Most Secret Memory of Men] justifies itself as the winner of the 2021 Prix Goncourt, one of France’s most prestigious literary prizes…a novel of undoubtable prowess.” —Kirkus Reviews
“A playful defense of Ouologuem, one laced with rage at a literary establishment obsessed with identity…[an] act of imaginative recovery.” —The Drift
“More than an engrossing investigation into the mysterious author of a cursed book, Sarr’s magnificent novel also offers a profound reflection on the resonance of literature in our lives.” —David Diop, International Booker Prize–winning author of At Night All Blood Is Black
“A powerful book, crossed by an epic breath that celebrates the power of literature.” —Alain Mabanckou, author of Black Moses
“Thanks to translator Lara Vergnaud, English-language readers can seamlessly experience Mohamed Mbougar Sarr’s pyrotechnic prose. A labyrinth of a novel, The Most Secret Memory of Men is as enthralling as it is thought-provoking. Sarr is a writer that comes along once in a lifetime.” —Eric Nguyen, author of Things We Lost to the Water
“I thought I’d come to terms with the spellbinding style of this young prodigy of Senegalese literature. That was until I came across his most luminous, vertiginous, and cerebral novel, The Most Secret Memory of Men. Sprinkled with flashes of rare purity, this is a high-flying reflection on the art of writing as well as the freedom and solitude it brings to the writer. Here comes an investigation about a cursed author, in which not one style, but many styles are woven together to give birth to a masterpiece of pure wonder. Sarr has written a political, funny, and sensual work of fiction that readers will devour like detective fiction with an esoteric flavor. It’s also a compelling journey into the dark pages of History, as well as to the heart of a question that lives in all those who can’t live without books: What can literature do while so many events constantly beset us?” —Blaise Ndala, award–winning author of In the Belly of the Congo
“An ingeniously constructed, ferociously intelligent literary detective novel in the tradition of Roberto Bolaño and Jorge Luis Borges. In The Most Secret Memory of Men, Mohamed Mbougar Sarr adds to the West’s fascination with canonization, cult books, and their absent authors, but with a resolutely postcolonial twist. His comic, piercing, multifaceted story politicizes the tendency of Europe’s literary establishment to tokenize and then erase marginalized authors. A brilliant, labyrinthine, highly entertaining page-turner, rightly cemented as a contemporary masterpiece by the Prix Goncourt.” —Dimitri Nasrallah, bestselling author of Hotline
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