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  • Published: 1 January 2008
  • ISBN: 9780099470335
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $26.99

Nine Nights



An extraordinary Brazilian novel, reminiscent of Naipaul, Faulkner or Conrad in its remarkable power and its exploration of human behaviour on the edges of civilisation.

In August 1939, a brilliant, privileged twenty-seven-year-old American ethnologist commits suicide in Brazil, leaving behind seven letters suggesting different motives. To some he said he had contracted a terrible disease; to others he claimed he could not recover from his wife's affair with his brother (though he was neither married, nor had a brother). Intrigued by the mystery, our narrator gathers the fragmentary evidence and sets out to discover the truth, becoming obsessed, before long, with the idea that there was an eighth letter.

Slipping between fact and fiction, reality and illusion, this striking and haunting novel by one of Brazil's most remarkable contemporary writers follwos one man's personal quest for certainty - a mission that slowly drives him mad; a Marlowe haunted by the fate of his own Kurtz.

  • Published: 1 January 2008
  • ISBN: 9780099470335
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 224
  • RRP: $26.99

About the author

Bernardo Carvalho

Bernardo Carvalho was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1960. He has been correspondent for A Folha De Sao Paulo in Paris and New York. He is the author of a number of other novels - most recently Mongolia - winner of the Prêmio Jabuti, Brazil's most prestigious literary prize, of which Nine Nights is the first to be published in English. Bernardo Carvalho lives in São Paulo.

Praise for Nine Nights

A spellbinding book, Nine Nights is a masterly combination blending fiction, research, history, ethnology and journalism

Le Figaro

Nine Nights [is] a beautiful and disturbing meditation on love and death, on familyand identity. A rich and profound study of the nature of doubt

La Croix

A hybrid novel which seeks out the fragile threads which connect truth to fiction, self to other. A masterpiece

Les Inrockuptibles

Deploys his fact/fiction hijinks to produce an ending that is still haunting me, months later

John Franzen, Guardian

A dark but exhilarating journey into the jungle of a man's mind - deftly written and highly original

Evening Herald

Gripping...a thriller in the manner of Joseph Conrad

Tetu