New York Times notable book of the year
In Fort-de-France, Martinique, a colorful group of musicians, street
vendors, and hopeless disciples, including the author, gather under a
tamarind tree to listen to legendary bard Solibo Magnificent spin tales.
Suddenly, in the middle of a raucously entertaining story, Solibo drops
dead. So entranced and drunken are his friends, they initially fail to
realize that their hero has spoken his last word. One hysterical
listener runs to find the doctor and inadvertently returns with the
overly eager, sinister chief sergeant, who holds Solibo's friends under
suspicion for murder. At turns a madcap murder mystery, a political
satire, and a lament on the death of a treasured tradition, Solibo
Magnificent is wildly imaginative and exuberantly lyrical.
Praise for Solibo Magnificent
"Both a meaty tale and a cry on behalf of a drowning culture . . . by a
poet and a novelist with a raffishly human and lyrical touch."--Los
Angeles Times
"A world class author . . . whose voice and imagination are like nothing
you've read before."--The Washington Post Book World