Cannibal is Africa from the inside - inside the head of a woman who fears that the man she loves is CIA, that the film they're supposed to make is his cover, that she might be pregnant. A haunting story of survival, Cannibal lays bare a woman's greatest hungers. Known as Good-For-Nothing by the Africans - unfit for the climate, the work, or friendship, she struggles for recognition, and for her life. What she finds, wandering the savannah for months, are the "blue people, " those with AIDS who have been left to die in an abandoned British outpost. But this is only counterpoint to her own predicament. "Trust hasn't enough syllables, " she says, regarding her lover walking ahead of her. "He doesn't look at it. I can't not look, but he won't look." In Cannibal, nobody wants to look - the differences are too frightening, the truth too stark, the love too little. A step beyond Heart of Darkness, Cannibal is the virtual reality of exotic paranoia where, when the images break apart, Death grins out.
| ISBN | 0814780121 | | Pages | 138 | | ISBN13 | 9780814780121 (What's this?) | | Volumes | 1 | | Publisher | New York University Press | | Weight (grammes) | 300 | | Imprint | New York University Press | | Published in | New York | | Format | Hardback | | Height (mm) | 222 | | Publication date | 01 Dec 1994 | | Width (mm) | 152 | | Library of Congress | PS3569, PS3569.V6 | | Spine width (mm) | 19 | | DEWEY | 813.54 | | Academic level | General | | DEWEY edition | DC21 | |
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"Clear, rich, and coherent, the book succeeds splendidly."-"Choice",
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