The Crime of Father Amaro

Author:   Eca de Queiros ,  Margaret Jull Costa ,  Margaret Jull Costa
Publisher:   Dedalus Ltd
ISBN:  

9781873982891


Pages:   471
Publication Date:   27 August 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Crime of Father Amaro


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Overview

The Crime of Father Amaro was Eca de Queiroz's first novel and in it he sets out to expose the hypocrisy of provincial Portugal. In this blackest of comedies, Eca de Queiroz depicts the effects of celibacy on a priest lacking any true vocation.

Full Product Details

Author:   Eca de Queiros ,  Margaret Jull Costa ,  Margaret Jull Costa
Publisher:   Dedalus Ltd
Imprint:   Dedalus Ltd
ISBN:  

9781873982891


ISBN 10:   1873982895
Pages:   471
Publication Date:   27 August 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Amaro Vieira, son of servants and orphaned at six, is brought up by his parents' employer, the Marquesa de Alegros. He is well treated and happy, but the Marquesa has decided that Amaro will enter the priesthood, the solution for many of Portugal's orphans. It is a profession for which he has no real enthusiasm but he sees no choice but to accept it. In the seminary he proves a competent pupil but feels agonized that life is passing him by. Even so, once a priest, all goes well until he is appointed to the country town of Lieria. Here he encounters provincial hypocrisy and deceit at its most extreme, and his relationships with his canon, the venal Dias, and the beautiful, young and willing Amelia ensure the collapse of his fragile moral fibre and expose in him a inner frailty that leads to tragedy. Written between 1875 and 1879 and revised several times, this is the work of one of Portugal's most respected 19th-century writers. Considered scandalous at the time, it portrays the clergy as manipulative and self-seeking and the secular world as no better. Lieria is full of people prepared to give advice that they have no intention of taking themselves and the priests are quite happy to use the populace's fear of eternal damnation to open a few doors or grease a few palms. The novel retains its power to disturb in the way in which the writer conveys each character's self-justification. Modern in its simplicity, it shows the way that homogeneity of purpose is achieved through self-deceit or the blaming of others, This process is depicted without overt judgement or moralising, making it finally a depressing norm in Queiroz's world. Written with restraint yet often deeply lyrical, this is a welcome addition to the range of classic novels available in English translation. (Kirkus UK)


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