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As Flies to Whatless Boys

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Tragedy and humor meet in an adventure-packed, historical novel about a British incursion into the island of Trinidad in 1845.

$15.95 $11.96

Available as an e-book for:


What people are saying…

As Flies to Whatless Boys has been longlisted for the 2015 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award!

Winner of the 2014 OCM Bocas Prize!

Included in World Literature Today‘s Nota Benes, Summer 2014

One of Edwidge Danticat’s Best Books of 2013, the New Yorker

Included in Tin House‘s Favorite Novels of 2013

“William’s account of young love attests to Antoni’s fluency in the poetry of nostalgia. In words as vibrant as the personalities he creates, Antoni deftly captures unconquered territories and the risks we’re willing to take exploring them.”
Publishers Weekly

“The emotional influence of Willy’s narrative—his loving descriptions of the people who surround him—is profoundly effective . . . Strikes strong emotional chords.”
Kirkus Reviews

“Antoni . . . has written a novel epic in scope that, while curiously bloodless, is driven by outbursts of fine writing.”
Booklist

“A rollicking 19th-century colonial tale blends history with imagination.”
Library Journal

“Robert Antoni gracefully combines layers of idealism, love, and a plague of the Black Vomit in this historical novel.”
World Literature Today

“It brings the travails and small delights of Willy Tucker to the centre stage of our imaginings, asking only that we accompany him on this unforgettable voyage.”
Caribbean Beat

“This tragic historical novel, accented with West Indian cadence and captivating humour, provides an unforgettable glimpse into 19th-century T&T. The book’s narrator, Willy, falls headover-heels for the enthralling and wise Marguerite Whitechurch. Coming from the gentry, Marguerite is a world away from Willy’s labouring class.”
The Trinidad Guardian, one of the Best Caribbean Books of the Year

“Reminds us that storytelling is fundamental to the human condition . . . A contending classic of postcolonial literature.”
Trinidad Guardian, Review/2014 OCM Bocas Prize Feature

“I have been hooked on Robert Antoni since his first novel, Divina Trace. His new one, As Flies to Whatless Boys, is a marvel of narrative and documents, which collide to create a book that is at times breathtaking and tragic and at other times laugh-out-loud hilarious.”
—Edwidge Danticat, who selected As Flies to Whatless Boys as a Best Book of 2013 for the New Yorker‘s Page-Turner Blog

“A bittersweet coming-of-age tale of tragedy, chicanery, high ideals, harsh realities, and the hard choice between love and family duty, As Flies to Whatless Boys is highly recommended.”
Midwest Book Review

“Antoni has a fine ear for cultural tensions and a wicked sense of humor.”
Ocean Drive Magazine

As Flies to Whatless Boys by Trinidadian Robert Antoni is a tragic historical novel, accented with West Indian cadence and captivating humour, and provides an unforgettable glimpse into 19th-century T&T.”
Trinidad Express News, Feature on Bocas Prize finalists

As Flies to Whatless Boys is a kind of complex word game, a historical narrative in a lilting Caribbean accent, wrapped around with an oddball love story in a wild form of English that seems to create itself as it goes along. In between, snippets of contemporary records provide foils for both these linguistic inventions.”
Historical Novel Society

“If you are a smart reader who likes something different, this will make you happy.”
Spacebeer

“A pleasure of a read. A lovely artifact of a book. A delight on many levels, and a deeply felt, deeply moving novel.”
Expendable Mudge Muses Aloud

“A marvel of a novel, layered in histories, Robert Antoni’s unique and engaging As Flies to Whatless Boys is an unforgettable and matchless work of fiction. A crowning achievement in an exceptional body of work by this amazingly talented writer.”
—Edwidge Danticat, author of Claire of the Sea Light

As Flies to Whatless Boys is an inventive, witty, comic romance that is as much about history and adventure as it is about language. With virtuosic attention to language, Robert Antoni delightfully explores the written word in all its forms—as letters, as e-mails, as reportage, as narration, as archives—to tell stories, to paint characters, to demonstrate the range and integrity of English and its dialects, and to edge us closer to ourselves as equally human beings.”
—Earl Lovelace, author of Is Just a Movie

As Flies to Whatless Boys is a brilliant novel that is rivetingly localized in a distant time and an untouched place, and yet somehow speaks vibrantly to this present age and to the universal human condition. Robert Antoni is a treasure of our literary culture.”
—Robert Olen Butler, Pultizer prize–winning author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain

“Robert Antoni doesn’t make giant steps. He makes quantum leaps past whatever we called metafiction to the same territory as Richard Powers and David Foster Wallace. But like those men and unlike nearly everybody else, he never forgets that at the core of it all you’ve still got to tell a rip-roaring story.”
—Marlon James, author of The Book of Night Women

“Like the preserved hummingbirds at its center, this novel is a tender and strange object, referencing something no longer with us, but maintained in its beauty as art.”
—Tiphanie Yanique, author of How to Escape from a Leper Colony

“Robert Antoni is one of the great comic writers of the New World—that sweaty, sun-blasted, eternally baroque, dystopia where our tears, issued from laughter or sorrow or more often both, have the potency of overproof rum. As Flies to Whatless Boys is a mishmash merriment of an adventure story, an island of luscious prose in a sea of delight.”
—Bob Shacochis, author of The Woman Who Lost Her Soul

“Robert Antoni makes stories out of history and history out of stories. In his nineteenth-century colonial tale of John Adolphus Etzler and his utopian idea to create a paradise in Trinidad, an adventure and family story unfolds . . . The tale is textured with the rich and differing rhythms of Trinidadian speech registers and illustrated with maps, typographic hieroglyphs, and footnotes. This ornate but clear design is interrupted by a twenty-first-century narrative of a quite different comic-erotic story, told in letters to the ‘writer’ from his National Archive ‘researcher,’ Ms. Ramsol. Antoni is an audacious storyteller, mining his very own language and ways of telling from the linguistic cornucopia of Trinidad. His story is moving and is also hilarious.”
—Lawrence Scott, author of Light Falling on Bamboo

“Robert Antoni is one of the most original and eloquent writers working today.”
—Stephen Dixon, author of I.

“Trinidad, indeed the whole of the Caribbean, has its James Joyce.”
—George Plimpton

“Antoni’s rhythmic sentences, dazzling imagination, and descriptive powers seduce me utterly.”
Daily Telegraph

“The physicality and bawdiness of Antoni’s writing is frequently hilarious. It is classic farcical humor which provokes a rocking laughter within the reader.”
Tribune (London)

“Celebrated Caribbean writer Antoni excels at confounding expectations.”
Booklist


Description

Check out Robert Antoni’s story, “How to Make Photocopies in the Trinidad & Tobago National Archives,” in Trinidad Noir.

In 1845 London, an engineer, philosopher, philanthropist, and bold-faced charlatan, John Adolphus Etzler, has invented machines “powered by the immense forces of Mother Nature” that he thinks will transform the division of labor and free all men. He forms a collective called the Tropical Emigration Society (TES), and recruits a variety of London citizens to take his machines and his misguided ideas to form a proto-socialist, utopian community in the British colony of Trinidad.

Among his recruits is a young boy (and the book’s narrator) named Willy. As TES begins its overseas voyage to Trinidad, Etzler recedes quickly to the backdrop, and Willy’s tale takes precedence—in particular his head-over-heels fall for the enthralling and wise Marguerite Whitechurch. Coming from the gentry, Marguerite is a world away from Willy’s laboring class. Speech also divides them, as Marguerite lacks vocal cords—she communicates with Willy in writing. As the voyage continues, and their love for one another strengthens, Willy and Marguerite prove themselves to be true socialists, their actions and adventures standing in stark contrast to Etzler’s disconnected theories.

When they arrive at Port of Spain, Willy must part from Marguerite and travel with the men of TES to build the society’s future home—in a remote swamp, only accessible by boat, called Chaguabarriga. Far from realizing their leader’s dreams of a tropical paradise, the pioneers never even get a chance to unpack their Satellite, Etzler’s “self-powered” machine that will mow down the rainforest and plant their first crops. Within weeks the majority of them are stricken with the “Black Vomit.” And now they’re trapped, without a boat to return to civilization . . .

Willy and his father—together with their helpmate, an African named John—make a last-ditch attempt to refurbish a schooner that has washed up. But before the ship can be launched Willy’s father contracts the dreaded disease, moving the story towards its heroic, tragic conclusion:  Willy’s account of transporting his father out of the jungle on a makeshift stretcher carried by himself, John, and two Warrahoon Indians. For a day and a night they haul him over the mountains of the Northern Range, across the breadth of Trinidad, back to Port of Spain and his family, only to spend his final few hours with them. This epic trek also brings fifteen-year-old Willy to the most trying decision of his life—whether to return to England with Marguerite, or become the head of his family in their new home. Antoni’s tragic historical novel, accented with West Indian cadence and captivating humor, provides an unforgettable glimpse into nineteenth-century Trinidad & Tobago.

Read excerpts of As Flies to Whatless Boys at Little Star Journal and BOMB.

Read a feature on Robert Antoni’s use of vernacular in As Flies to Whatless Boys at the Huffington Post.

Read about As Flies to Whatless Boys at The Next Best Book Blog’s spotlight on Akashic titles.

Read an interview with Robert Antoni at Literary Ashland.


Book Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Published: 9/3/13
  • IBSN: 9781617751561
  • e-IBSN: 9781617752001
  • Hardcover
  • IBSN: 9781617751554

Author

ROBERT ANTONI is equal parts Trinbagonian, Bahamian, and US citizen. He is the author of five novels, most recently As Flies to Whatless Boys. He is the recipient of a NALIS Lifetime Literary Award from the Trinidad & Tobago National Library. He is the coeditor of Trinidad Noir: The Classics.

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