Dany Laferrière was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in 1953. He is the author of fourteen novels, including I Am a Japanese Writer, Heading South and the award-winning How to Make Love to a Negro without Getting Tired. Laferrière's awards include the Prix Carbet and the Governor General's Literary Award.
David Homel was born and raised in Chicago in 1952. He has been a journalist, editor, literary translator, and teacher, and has won numerous awards for translation, including the Governor General's Award for Literature, Canada's highest literary honor.
"Keen observation, incisive analysis and passionate engagement mark
this author's account of the 2010 earthquake that devastated his
native Haiti ... Through vignettes that range from a paragraph to a
couple of pages, novelist Laferrière delivers a knockout punch
through prose favoring matter-of-fact understatement over
sentimental histrionics." --Kirkus Reviews (STARRED REVIEW)
"Laferrière has a lucid plain-style which may remind American
readers of the best of Ernest Hemingway, specifically Hemingway's
commitment to writing about the actions that produce emotions,
rather than about feelings themselves ... The glimpses Laferriere
records of people on the devastated streets of Port-au-Prince
accrue to give a deeper substance to the idea of Haitian
indomitability." --Slate.com "A compelling firsthand account with
cleverly crafted imagery and skilfully interwoven narrative strands
about a country shook to its bare bones, fighting to defeat the
shadow of death ... Just as T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land is made up
of seemingly disjointed images that work together to create a
whole, so too is Laferrière's memoir. It is this 'heap of broken
images' - to borrow Eliot's words - that are held together by the
strongest thread of all: culture." --ARC magazine "Laferrière has
written not only a valuable book but also a necessary one, a slim
but potent volume reminding us that the people of Haiti deserve far
better than the cards handed to them by fate ... In a just world,
this book will excite renewed passion for helping Haiti and also a
large audience for Laferrière himself, a talented writer who
deserves a wide readership." --National Post "The World is Moving
Around Me is unpretentious, starkly honest and good-humoured.
Laferrière, a prize-winning novelist in the francophone literary
world, is a masterful writer and his memoir, told in a clear and
simple voice beautifully rendered by translator David Homel, is
true to his vision of the essential role of culture, 'the only
thing that can stand up to the earthquake ... intellectual culture
[and] what structures a nation. If we don't want to turn into a
victim nation, we have to keep moving. We'll cry later when things
are better.' " --The Globe and Mail
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