Giraffe

Giraffe

by J.M.Ledgard (Author)

Synopsis

In 1975, on the eve of May Day, secret police dressed in chemical warfare suits sealed off a zoo in a small Czechoslovakian town, and ordered the destruction of the largest captive herd of giraffes in the world. This apparently senseless massacre lies at the heart of J. M. Ledgard's remarkable first novel. Ledgard tells the story of the giraffes from the moment of their capture in Africa to their deaths far away behind the Iron Curtain. We see them first through the eyes of Emil, a haemodynamicist (he studies blood flow in vertical creatures) who is chosen to accompany them from Hamburg by barge into Czechoslovakia. There Amina, a sleepwalker, a factory girl, glimpses their arrival, is awakened by them, and goes each day to gaze up at them. She is with them at the end, blinding them with a torch, as Jiri, a sharpshooter, brings them down one by one. "Giraffe" is a story about strangeness, about creatures that are alien, silent, finely mazed, and impossibly stretched. It is also a story about captivity, about Czechoslovakia, a middling totalitarian state in the middle of Europe that is itself asleep, under a spell, a nation of sleepwalkers. "Giraffe" is beautiful, unearthly, and unforgettable.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd
Published: 02 Mar 2006

ISBN 10: 0224076892
ISBN 13: 9780224076890
Book Overview: One of the strangest, most beautiful novels you'll ever read, Giraffe bears comparison with the fiction of Sebald and Kundera.

Author Bio
J.M. Ledgard was born in the Shetland Isles in 1968 and educated in England, Scotland and America. He is a foreign correspondent for The Economist. He has lived and worked in America, Eastern Europe and, most recently, Afghanistan. He lives in Prague.