The Parrots

The Parrots

by N/A

Synopsis

A searing satire of the literary world, in which three men fight-to the death?-for a coveted literary prizeThree men are preparing to do battle. Their goal is a prestigious literary prize. And each man will do anything to win it. For the young Beginner, loved by critics more than readers, it means fame. For The Master, old, exhausted, preoccupied with his prostate, it means money. And for The Writer-successful, vain and in his prime-it is a matter of life and death. As the rivals lie, cheat and plot their way to victory, their paths crossing with ex-wives, angry girlfriends, preening publishers and a strange black parrot, the day of the Prize Ceremony takes on a far darker significance than they could have imagined.Filippo Bologna was born in Tuscany in 1978. He lives in Rome where he works as a writer and screenwriter. His novels The Parrots and are also published by Pushkin Press. With Filippo Bologna's mastery of language, the results are brilliant and amusement is guaranteed. La Repubblica A flaying parody of the literary world and its vanities. Il Giornale

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Edition: Tra
Publisher: Pushkin Press
Published: 08 May 2014

ISBN 10: 1782270396
ISBN 13: 9781782270393

Media Reviews
Bologna is a name to watch Guardian This very funny satire about the stuffy little world of literature could be set anywhere... It's a hoot, written with a shrewd eye for the absurdity of certain literary egos The Times A five-star satire on literary vanity ... A wonderful, surprising novel with a rich payload of emotion behind the caricature Metro A satire of Swiftian rancour... the parrots of the title act as apt metaphors for the endless churn of appropriation and pastiche that passes for literary originality... Bologna has a gift, preserved in Howard Curtis's crisp translation, for the comically jolting simile -- Nat Segnit TLS A scathing satire about the murky world of Italy's prestigious literary awards... Bologna paints a comically grim picture of a culture of back-stabbing and deceit Financial Times [Bologna's] smart new novel ... [has a] smooth, knowing narrator ... shrewd and precise, often comic, with a cool eye for the truth of these characters -- Daniel Hahn Independent Very funny ... lucidly translated -- Lucy Popescu Huffington Post Where Edward St Aubyn offers a slightly stilted satire on book awards and judges in Lost For Words - not to mention a pretty bitter, score-settling one - Filippo Bologna's The Parrots, about three male rivals for a prestigious literary prize, and the ludicrous lengths they'll go to to try and win it, is far funnier as an examination of the vanity of novelists Mr Hyde Tacks between high literary majesty and good hard slapstick without ever capsizing... scintillating... that rarest of books: a damn decent novel about writers... terrific -- Samuel Ashworth Brooklyn Rail Bologna demonstrates an expert eye for human observation, and Howard Curtis' lucid translation captures this beautifully... a truly modern novel bursting with style and wit New Welsh Review Very funny... caustic, merciless, and cynical Swiftly Tilting Planet
Author Bio
Filippo Bologna (b. 1978) is an award-winning screenwriter, essayist and journalist. In 2009, he published his prize-winning debut novel, How I Lost the War, a satire about eco-cultural terrorism in an idyllic Tuscan town. Published in English by Pushkin Press in 2011, Howard Curtis's translation was shortlisted for the prestigious 2012 Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize. His screenplay for Paolo Genovese's Perfect Strangers (Perfetti sconosciuti) has been shortlisted for the Tribeca 2016 Festival's 'International Narrative' prize.