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  • Published: 31 July 2013
  • ISBN: 9781446419489
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 352

Canaan's Tongue



A second novel from a young writer who could well become one of America's most distinguished novelists. A brilliantly macabre tale of 19th century corruption in the deep south that aims, through historical analogy, to say things about the dark heart of today's America.

From the acclaimed and prizewinning author of The Right Hand of Sleep ("Brilliant . . . A truly arresting work"-The New York Times Book Review),an explosive allegorical novel set on the eve of the Civil War, about a gang of men hunted by both the Union and the Confederacy for dealing in stolen slaves.

Geburah Plantation, 1863: in a crumbling estate on the banks of the Mississippi, eight survivors of the notorious Island 37 Gang wait for the war, or the Pinkerton Detective Agency, to claim them. Their leader, a bizarre charismatic known only as "the Redeemer," has already been brought to justice, and each day brings the battling armies closer. The hatred these men feel for one another is surpassed only by their fear of their many pursuers. Into this hell comes a mysterious force, an "avenging angel" that compels them, one by one, to a reckoning of their many sins.

Canaan's Tongue isrooted in the criminal world of John Murrell, as infamous in his day as Jesse James or Al Capone. It tells the story of his reluctant protégé, Virgil Ball, who derives riches, sexual privilege, and power from the commerce in stolen slaves, known only as "the Trade"-and discovers, when he finally decides to free himself from the Redeemer's yoke, that the force he is challenging is far more formidable than he imagined. It is as old as the river, as vast as the country itself, and it is with us to this day.

  • Published: 31 July 2013
  • ISBN: 9781446419489
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 352

About the author

John Wray

John Wray was born in Washington, DC in 1971, the son of an Austrian mother and an American father, both scientists. His childhood was divided between the United States and Austria. In 1996 a selection of his poems won a prize from the Academy of American Poets and New York University. He is the author of three novels, The Right Hand of Sleep, Lowboy and Canaan's Tongue. He lives in New York.

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Praise for Canaan's Tongue

Ambitious and disturbing

Margaret Walters, Sunday Times

Brilliant...The novel speaks to our time, of course, as all good historical novels do, and offers an interesting perspective on the legacy of slavery in particular

Guardian

Fast-paced and vivid

Paul Watkins, Times

Exquisite, rich in startling imagery and gallows poetry

TLS

There are elements of Poe and Faulkner here and, of course, Twain - a peculiarly American Gothic mix... important, innovative and compelling

Sunday Herald