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Shack in the Favela, Village in Bahia: Parts 9 and 10 of Lawrence's memoir My Very Long Youth
Contributor(s): Bohme, Lawrence (Author)
ISBN: 1533011737     ISBN-13: 9781533011732
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $17.09  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: May 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Travel | South America - Brazil
Physical Information: 0.83" H x 6" W x 9" (1.19 lbs) 406 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The year 1967 finds Lawrence alone in Rio, having quarrelled both with Jonathon, his New York friend in Brazil on a linguistics grant, and the wealthy Brazilian who, thanks again to Olimpio, has let him stay at his flat on Copacabana Beach. Having in the meantime befriended a fisherman's family, in their shack on a hillside in Ipanema, Lawrence agrees to teach English to young Joaninha in exchange for room and board, living in a cobbler's shop shared "with the cobbler by day and the rats by night". But his unglazed window gloriously overlooks the entrance to the bay, of which Lawrence makes several drawings with his pen (shown among the illustrations). As the sole truly white man in the favela and having already learned some samba steps, Lawrence is recruited to take part in the carnival parade, disguised as a legendary Portuguese plantation owner who marries his beautiful mulatta slave. His costume - "fantasia" - consists of a top hat and a large "diamond" brooch on his cravate, as well as a blue "silk" coat... At the language school where Lawrence teaches English, he befriends a Japanese immigrant, Yukio, who works in the crafts boutique next door. Soon the two friends set up a factory employing the favela people to make leather sandals and handbags, and move into a one-room Copacabana apartment "so we could entertain our girlfriends in privacy". Lawrence's mother comes from California and soon persuades her devoted son to spend a year in a fishing village in Bahia, where they can paint and write... The two rent a house surrounded with coconut trees in a village up the coast from Salvador, where the fishermen go out on spindly rafts called "jangadas" and bring back groupers and octopus, which Joan's favourite "pescador" cooks in coconut milk and palm oil for their dinner. After five years in Brazil, though, Lawrence decides it is time to go back "to civilization" to find a publisher for the book he's been writing about Brazilian life. By the end of 1970 he's back in Lower Manhattan in a rent-controlled tenement flat where he practices his new trade as a custom-made leather goods maker with success. But after two fruitless years of searching for a publisher, he throws the only copy of his manuscript into a garbage can on Spring Street, and desperately resolves - "for lack of anything better to do with my life" - to set off on a new adventure, in the Black Republic Haiti, just two years after the ruthless dictator "Papa Doc" Duvalier has been replaced by his relatively benign son "Baby Doc".Lawrence Bohme's whimsically told but scrupulously faithful "personal history" of his first 41 years is entitled My Very Long Youth because "due to a force beyond my control I only started growing up, or calming down, after that age". The eclectic author - "a half-European, half-American child of the second half of the 20th century" - describes his opus as simultaneously "a retrospective diary, an eye-witness history book, an idiosyncratic collection of drawings and photographs, a one-way, slow-motion travel guide, a movie made up of stills and, to put it politely, a partially contrite confession of compulsive concupiscence"...