Haiti: Best Nightmare on EarthTransaction Publishers, 1991 - 321 pages "In the course of an impressive career as a writer, Herbert Gold has demonstrated many gifts, among them his talent for making high drama of ordinary events, ordinary people."-Chicago Tribune Book World "Goldhas a sharp eye for detail."-The Washington Times Magazine "Not just a good book, but a great one."-London Daily Mail "Herbert Goldgives his stories a wry, bright air of wonderhe is a born storyteller."-New York Times "One of the most gifted writers in America."-Detroit News Five decades ago, award-winning author Herbert Gold traveled to Haiti on a Caribbean version of the Fulbright Scholarship. The journey proved to be a turning point in his life. Fifty years later, his attachment to the tiny Caribbean nation-his second home-remains as passionate and powerful as ever. Now, in Best Nightmare on Earth, he explores the secret life of this vibrant, volatile, violent land. " Herbert Gold reflects on the country's history and politics, culture and folklore, but sees much more. He sees Haiti through the eyes of a lover: impassioned, jealous, probing, ever alert, and alive. This book will be of interest to travelers to, and people interested in the problems of, Haiti and the Caribbean; and collectors of Haitian art. Herbert Gold is a novelist, short writer, essayist, sometime journalist, who has made his living as a writer for fifty years. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 33
Page 4
... elite — African and French and Haitian all at once , and negotiating their lives and their history with unique charm and difficulty . When the coastal waters began to turn tropical , Jean changed into a white linen suit and began to ...
... elite — African and French and Haitian all at once , and negotiating their lives and their history with unique charm and difficulty . When the coastal waters began to turn tropical , Jean changed into a white linen suit and began to ...
Page 6
... elite society . She raged at the Haitian wife's conversation , which was mostly on the order of : " Est - ce que vous aimez le Brillo , Ma- dame ? " It sounds no more fascinating in English . Do you like Brillo , Madame ? The lady ...
... elite society . She raged at the Haitian wife's conversation , which was mostly on the order of : " Est - ce que vous aimez le Brillo , Ma- dame ? " It sounds no more fascinating in English . Do you like Brillo , Madame ? The lady ...
Page 7
... elite also spoke the language of childhood , that rich and spicy Creole . The handsome and graceful Haitian air force officers who courted visiting tourist women ( sometimes lined up at the bar of the Oloffson to pick this northern ...
... elite also spoke the language of childhood , that rich and spicy Creole . The handsome and graceful Haitian air force officers who courted visiting tourist women ( sometimes lined up at the bar of the Oloffson to pick this northern ...
Page 9
... elite won- dered how we could manage with so few . After intense resistance , sometimes lasting as long as two or three days , foreigners ended by accepting the system . Haitian commu- nists have servants ; I know a Maoist , educated at ...
... elite won- dered how we could manage with so few . After intense resistance , sometimes lasting as long as two or three days , foreigners ended by accepting the system . Haitian commu- nists have servants ; I know a Maoist , educated at ...
Page 16
... elite and by for- eigners ; the people spoke Creole and , except for about 8 percent of the population , did not understand , read , or write French . The people were profoundly rooted in the celebrations of the voodoo pantheon ...
... elite and by for- eigners ; the people spoke Creole and , except for about 8 percent of the population , did not understand , read , or write French . The people were profoundly rooted in the celebrations of the voodoo pantheon ...
Table des matières
Chapter Three LoupgarousWerewolvesHobgoblins | 37 |
Chapter Four The Renaissance of the Fifties | 51 |
Chapter Five Combat de Coqs | 69 |
Chapter Six Castaways | 75 |
Chapter Seven Land Without Jews | 91 |
Chapter Eight The Philosophers Circle | 109 |
Chapter Nine The Darkest Ages | 123 |
Chapter Ten Here Is the Young Leader that | 157 |
Chapter Eleven In Haiti They Run From | 181 |
Chapter Twelve Minglers | 203 |
Chapter Thirteen The Perfect Dear | 219 |
1986 | 233 |
Chapter Fifteen After the Dawn Came Another Night | 251 |
Chapter Sixteen Wonder of the World | 283 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
African airport American Army asked Aubelin Jolicoeur Aubie Baby Doc Baron Samedi blanc Bogat called Caribbean Carnival chickens coffee colonel Creole dance daughter dear dechoukaj Dieudonné Lamothe Doc's doctor dream drink drove drums election elite English eyes foreign François Duvalier French Grand Hotel Oloffson Haiti Haitian happy head Hotel Oloffson houngan island Jacmel Jean Weiner Jean-Claude Jean-Claude Duvalier jeep Jews journalist Kenscoff killed knew laughing Leopards lived looked loupgarou macoutes Madame Marc Bazin Miami minglers Minister Monsieur mountain mulatto Namphy National Palace night official painting Papa Doc Paris peasant Peter-Paul Pétionville Petit Goâve pigs political Port-au-Prince President President-for-Life regime rich road running seemed shrugged smiling sometimes stared streets terrace things tonton macoutes tourists tropical village visitors voodoo voodoo priest vote wanted watch wife woman women young zombies
Fréquemment cités
Page xii - Nos ancêtres, les Gaulois, avaient les yeux bleus et les cheveux blonds. Our ancestors, the Gauls, had blue eyes and blond hair. V/y/y/yy^yyyy^JJ^^ U LaTOTtUe: the former buccaneer inland where a Texas company tried to make an independent M.ir.
Page 28 - Columbia and Carnegie Tech were beginning to replace the Sorbonne, but it was the graduate of French schools who won the respect due a scholar and gentleman. An agronomist who defended his American hosts was admonished with the peasant saying: "The fish trusts the water, and it is in the water that it is cooked.
Page 17 - The little fellow does what he can, the big fellow does what he wants.