Accordion Crimes

by Annie Proulx

Format: Paperback 544 pages

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Synopsis

The third novel from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of 'The Shipping News', 'Accordion Crimes' spans generations, continents and a century and confirms the hallucinatory power of Proulx's writing. 'Accordion Crimes' is a masterpiece of story-telling that spans a century and a continent. It opens in 1890 in Sicily, when an accordion-maker and his son, carrying little more than his finest button accordion, begin their voyage to the teeming, violent port of New Orleans. Within a year, the accordion-maker is murdered by an anti-Italian lynch mob, but his instrument carries the novel into another community of immigrants: German-Americans founding a new town in South Dakota. Moving from South Dakota to Texas, from Montana to Maine, the nine instantly compelling and intricately connected sections of the novel illuminate the lives of the founders of a nation, descendants of Mexicans, Poles, Germans, Irish, Scots and Franco-Canadians. Through the music of the accordion they express their fantasies, sorrows and exuberance.

Book details

Published
05/06/1997

Publisher
Fourth Estate Ltd

ISBN
9781857025750



Publisher and industry reviews

Jacket review

'This novel confirms Proulx as one of the greatest American writers.' Independent 'The detail is breathtaking, her ear for dialogue matchless, her observation unsentimental, her pace infectious. She tackles death, sex and the gruesome with black hilarity and the skills of a born storyteller. Rich and dense, "Accordion Crimes" is a splendid novel.' The Times 'Annie Proulx has written an epic social history of America and the plight of the immigrant, which is astonishing in its breadth, heroic in the scale of its ambition and brilliant in its manner of realising them.' Daily Mail 'The glorious richness of the language continually makes you pause in wonder, the details pile up and surround you.' Scotsman 'Her range and scope are tremendous, shuttling through the warp of multiple cultures and spanning, by the end, a hundred years. And it is the range of detail that grips, richly concrete.' Spectator 'Vigorous, salty and extraordinary.' The Times

UK Kirkus review

Proulx's fourth novel charts a bleak emotional landscape. The story follows the fortunes of the luckless owners of a green, two-row button accordion, from its creator, an Italian immigrant lynched in Louisiana in 1891, to a gaggle of black children scratching out an existence on the edge of a rubbish tip in 1991. With dazzling virtuosity she portrays a host of races and cultures as successive waves of immigrants and outsiders are dashed on the rocks of America. The delicate ornamentation of the author's prose contrasts with the lurid tabloid-like disasters which befall her characters. (Kirkus UK)

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