The Gospel According to the New World
by Maryse Condé
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 7 Mar 2023 | Archive Date 7 Mar 2023
Talking about this book? Use #TheGospelAccordingtotheNewWorld #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
SHORTLISTED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL BOOKER PRIZE 2023
“The great voice of the Caribbean.” —Jury, International Booker 2023
“French novelist Condé (Waiting for the Waters to Rise) delivers an ingenious bildungsroman of a messianic figure in contemporary Martinique. Readers will be transfixed.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review
A miracle baby is born on Easter Sunday, rumored to be the child of God. Award-winning Caribbean author Maryse Condé follows his journey in search of his origins and mission.
One Easter Sunday, Madame Ballandra puts her hands together and exclaims: “A miracle!” Baby Pascal is strikingly beautiful, brown in complexion, with gray-green eyes like the sea. But where does he come from? Is he really the child of God? So goes the rumor, and many signs throughout his life will cause this theory to gain ground. From journey to journey and from one community to another, Pascal sets off in search of his origins, trying to understand the meaning of his mission. Will he be able to change the fate of humanity? And what will the New World Gospel reveal? For all its beauty, vivacity, humor, and power, Maryse Condé’s latest novel is above all a work of combat. Lucid and full of conviction, Condé attests that solidarity and love remain our most extraordinary and lifesaving forces.
Advance Praise
Praise for Maryse Condé
“She describes the ravages of colonialism and the post-colonial chaos in a language which is both precise and overwhelming. In her stories the dead live close to the living in a world where gender, race, and class are constantly turned over in new constellations.” —ANN PÅLSSON, Jury, New Academy Prize in Literature
“Condé is a born storyteller.” —Publishers Weekly
“Maryse Condé is a great storyteller, she has managed to explore very political issues—gender, race, colonialism, class, postcolonial issues, slavery—and she did that a long time ago, and she did that in a variety of historical and geographical backgrounds. For me, she is a pioneer for us Afro-descendent women writers. She bridges gaps among the whole Black diaspora.” —BEATA UMUBYEYI MAIRESSE
“She is part of our Black family … She has helped us to see ourselves reflected in so many different mirrors that she holds for us … She is a force of nature, she is an inspiration to women … She has given us so much.”—BISI ADJAPON
“There are lots of things I like about Maryse Condé’s writing, but one thing that gets me every time is the lyricism of her prose.”—CHIKA UNIGWE
“It’s inspiring to see that Condé gives words and meaning to our histories—African histories, Black histories, Black lives.”—CLARICE GARGARD
“Maryse Condé has given me the freedom to call myself woman.” —EDWIGE-RENÉE DRO
“Maryse Condé is an African literary elder … she reminds us Anglophone readers that there is a world of Francophone literature out there that we are missing out on. I would like to point out that Maryse Condé built a bridge between Africa and the Caribbean world … There’s this thing she does where she holds the reader’s hand, and the reader gets comfortable … and somewhere along the way you get smacked in the face.” —JENNIFER NANSUBUGA MAKUMBI
“Her writing is so rich. It’s so vibrant. But, as well, you are learning things all the time. She’s just a wonderful storyteller. She’s a masterful storyteller. But she also has a sense of realism in her work. It’s just wonderful—it’s an experience, reading her work.” —KADIJA GEORGE
“Maryse Condé shows African lives in a way that’s rich, that’s glamorous, and in a way that shows the characters to be as flawed as they really are … It’s very rare to come across a writer of fiction who puts so much of their personal story into their work … Her books challenge one’s perceptions of oneself, which I think is one of the greatest things that Miss Maryse Condé does for the Black person. When you read her work you are forced to reexamine the definition of your own Blackness.” —LOLA SHONEYIN
“Her work really links the questions that face Black people all over the world … showing you the conditions that the Black person faces in the world.” —MOLARA WOOD
“I love the honesty … she doesn’t go with the flow. It’s very easy for someone of her generation to have gone along with the tide of African socialism or Négritude, that sort of thing, but she’s always been honest about any misgivings or disinterest in certain currents of thinking and culture. She’s very original in that respect.”—NOO SARO-WIWA
“I think she embodies the world. She belongs to the world … the breadth of her global experience, at a time when we didn’t speak about Black women as belonging to the world is remarkable.” —SISONKE MSIMANG
“What I like is that she’s honest. I think she has confidence in her readers and lets them think for themselves, and that I appreciate a lot.” —VÉRONIQUE TADJO
“Maryse Condé has managed to successfully bridge the gap between Africa and its diaspora. If nothing else, reading her work helps us get into the mindset to know about our brothers and sisters from the diaspora.” —ZUKISWA WANNER
“Maryse Condé is a treasure of world literature, writing from the center of the African diaspora with brilliance and a profound understanding of all humanity.”—RUSSELL BANKS
“Maryse Condé is the grande dame of Caribbean literature.” —NCRV Gids
Praise for The Gospel According to the New World
“With The Gospel According to the New World, Maryse Condé offers us a poetic and haunting fable-like novel. A newborn left in a garden, miracles and symbols—this is a biblical story that evokes wonder and conjures a welcome optimism. There is no age limit on dreaming.” —ELLE
“A moving, gripping humanist novel not devoid of humor. An evenhanded reflection on fraternity and love in the twenty-first century. Maryse Condé is phenomenal.”—Aujourd’hui en France
“What a delightful adventure! Maryse Condé has the audacity to reinvent the Gospel, adapting it to her island, today’s Guadeloupe. Maryse Condé’s usual colorful, rich, sensuous prose sweeps us along. The author mischievously sticks close to the life of Jesus and then breaks away from it with the imagination and verve of a griot: it’s a celebration.” —La Vie
“An irresistible version of the life of Jesus. What holds this novel together—more than the diversity of the episodes, the beauty of the erotic scenes, and the book’s humor—is Maryse Condé’s ability to play with our need to believe in a savior and our hope that another world is possible, as well as with the necessity to laugh with that dream. The book’s second victory is its portrait of the messiah as a man who goes to college and learns about the complexity of the world by talking to women of all walks of life. The person the author imagines as the next messiah is a humble and loving being.” —Le Monde des livres
Marketing Plan
- Condé is the Grande Dame of Caribbean Literature, and a literary giant comparable to Aimé Césaire, Jacques Roumain, Ousmane Sembène, Mahmoud Darwish, and Derek Walcott
- Condé was awarded the Alternative Nobel Prize in 2018, and the French National Order of Merit by President Emmanuel Macron
- Advance galleys and digital reader copies
- Digital assets including trailer & author video
- National TV, radio, print, and online review & advertising campaign
- Book club discussion guide
- Bookstore co-op available
- Excerpt placement
- Social media campaign & Goodreads Giveaway
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781642861181 |
PRICE | US$18.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 184 |
Links
Featured Reviews
This was a strangely wonderful book. It took me a while to get into the style, and Pascal's seemingly constant travelling and new friends and lovers, but it was an interesting read. The author managed to look at some of the big questions of faith and belonging and the way "others" are treated with a refreshingly different eye. I feel sure I will be thinking about the content of this book for some time to come.
Thank you to netgalley and world editions for an advance copy of this book
When I first started thus book I stopped a couple times with a "ugh just another book" well I finally picked it back up and once I got into it?! I loved this book! What an enjoyable read!
Maryse Conde’s latest novel is a brilliant offering inspired by the trials and tribulations of Jesus Christ. Although set in modern times, Pascal’s birth origins, friends, and encounters eerily mirror those outlined two millennia earlier as depicted in the Bible. For example, there are a host of characters with similar names, talents and backgrounds as their Biblical doppelgangers: key figures such as Mary Magdalene, Judas, siblings Mary, Martha, Lazarus; at one point he picks up disciples (about 12 of them) and they have a Last Supper complete with the washing of the feet. He even has a birth mother named Maya and an ethereal uncle (biological father’s brother) named Espiritu (a very intriguing character) – who rounds out the Holy Trinity insinuation.
Pascal is a typical young man who grows restless; he wants independence and answers to questions that have plagued him since childhood. Thus he begins a quest to other lands to find his biological father – an elusive man who has touched the lives of so many, but is seemingly absent in his. He hopes his father will help him understand his life’s purpose and provide guidance on how to fulfill his destiny to change the world (for the better). Along the way, human nature is on display. He and his friends are persecuted, ridiculed, jailed unjustly, ostracized, disenfranchised, etc. He sees the unfair treatment of women and girls purely based on gender, the ill-treatment of immigrants in foreign lands, the fates of unwed mothers, invalids, the physically disabled, the mentally challenged, the destitute. In these travels, he notices the humility and hope in those who are mistreated. He finds witnesses who testify to his father’s love, concerns, and benevolence.
Early in the novel, there’s a quote, “...he was born in a land of the spoken word where lies are stronger than truth.” Conde’s creativity shines in the creation of situations, twists, and turns that illustrate how and why myths and legends often emerge from misconception and/or exaggeration – and at times, Pascal’s actions and inactions have nothing to do with what people want (and need) to believe. Miracles are born and they have legs to travel. Within this compact and layered narrative, she showcases how these beliefs are often used by entities (including the government and other factions) for political, financial, and/or religious purposes. There are some HEAVY socio-political themes, multi-cultural beliefs, and various religious and regional (Hindu, Islam, Rastafarian, African, Asian) philosophies at play that provide a lot for the reader to consider, making this a great choice for book clubs who want to broach such topics.
The message at the end is simple, poignant, and timeless – very touching!
Thanks to the publisher, World Editions, and NetGalley for an opportunity to review.
This Gospel parody written by Maryse Condé is her last book, she says, one she wishes to be a testament of her persistent faith—that inner strength and love is what is needed to change the world. The protagonist is a man named Pascal who was abandoned by his mother at birth on Easter Sunday. His foster mother Eulalie, childless, visits shops and parks to show off this beautiful boy. His racial ambiguity and the mysteries surrounding his origin lead to rumors that God has sent the world a second son. Eulalie does not discourage these rumors, but her husband considers them blasphemous.
The rumors of divine origin will follow Pascal through his life, though he is never able to understand what is expected of him. Condé walks readers through his unexceptional life, infusing the story with biblical events and populating it with locals similarly named to those whose stories she is patterning. Pascal is a typical boy, “always in search of a mean trick to play on someone,” enjoying the ocean and time with friends. He grows to be a man who indulges his vices—women, alcohol, Lucky Strikes. He teaches classes, occasionally writes his stories, neglects his aging foster parents then suffers from guilt, though the cycle will repeat. He is routinely put at risk and flees to another location where his indulgences and questions about his purpose tumble along.
While this book is a novel approach, it felt plodding. Pascal engages in activities, ponders questions, moves to another location and does the same. I am delighted to have discovered this author and look forward to reading her other works.
Thank you to NetGalley and World Editions for providing this eARC.