
Choice Made Simple!
Too many options?Click below to purchase an online gift card that can be used at participating retailers in Village Green Shopping Centre and continue your shopping IN CENTRE!Purchase HereHome
Founding Fictions of The Dutch Caribbean: Eric de Brabander's Life Everlasting Doña Lisa (Het hiernamaals van Lisa)
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Founding Fictions of The Dutch Caribbean: Eric de Brabander's Life Everlasting Doña Lisa (Het hiernamaals van Lisa) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $116.95

Coles
Founding Fictions of The Dutch Caribbean: Eric de Brabander's Life Everlasting Doña Lisa (Het hiernamaals van Lisa) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $116.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Originally published in Dutch as Het hiernamaals van Doa Lisa , The Life Everlasting of Doa Lisa is a hard-boiled, minimalist, postmodern novel about the perennial problems of postcolonialism. This is a tale of a failed attempt to escape Trinta di Mei , the postcolonial revolt of May 30, 1969, on the Dutch Caribbean island of Curaao. Edgar Raven, nicknamed Boyo, the central character, makes the fateful decision to abandon Curaao temporarily during these chaotic events. He leaves behind the burned-out husk of his home and dental practice with nothing more than some cash in his pocket and a few essentials, bringing with him his two closest friends, Kai, a fisherman, and JonJon, a retired marine engineer now paralyzed and condemned to a wheelchair. Together they travel to Venezuela for a "little vacation" and to buy a new fishing boat. This choice unleashes an avalanche of consequences, described in a narrative style that seems like a digressive festival of ideas and philosophies, intellectual duets and arias, stitched together with the clipped and brutal realism of the narration. But the plot leaves Boyo in the company of Sophoclean tragic figures, as close to oblivion as one can come without giving in to it entirely.
A major new contribution to Founding Fictions of the Dutch Caribbean , and a landmark translation, The Life Everlasting of Doa Lisa will appeal to readers interested in the history of the Caribbean, lovers of postmodernist literature, and those teaching courses on Caribbean and postcolonial literature.
Originally published in Dutch as Het hiernamaals van Doa Lisa , The Life Everlasting of Doa Lisa is a hard-boiled, minimalist, postmodern novel about the perennial problems of postcolonialism. This is a tale of a failed attempt to escape Trinta di Mei , the postcolonial revolt of May 30, 1969, on the Dutch Caribbean island of Curaao. Edgar Raven, nicknamed Boyo, the central character, makes the fateful decision to abandon Curaao temporarily during these chaotic events. He leaves behind the burned-out husk of his home and dental practice with nothing more than some cash in his pocket and a few essentials, bringing with him his two closest friends, Kai, a fisherman, and JonJon, a retired marine engineer now paralyzed and condemned to a wheelchair. Together they travel to Venezuela for a "little vacation" and to buy a new fishing boat. This choice unleashes an avalanche of consequences, described in a narrative style that seems like a digressive festival of ideas and philosophies, intellectual duets and arias, stitched together with the clipped and brutal realism of the narration. But the plot leaves Boyo in the company of Sophoclean tragic figures, as close to oblivion as one can come without giving in to it entirely.
A major new contribution to Founding Fictions of the Dutch Caribbean , and a landmark translation, The Life Everlasting of Doa Lisa will appeal to readers interested in the history of the Caribbean, lovers of postmodernist literature, and those teaching courses on Caribbean and postcolonial literature.



















