’THE VENTRILOQUlST’S TALE is told by a beguil[ngnew voice Pauline Melville writes with an unusually dispassionate lushness that is both intellectual and sensual. By taking a notably cool look at an extremely steamy story, she has created an eye-opening fiction. I believe her to be one of the few genuinely original writers to emerge in recent years’ SALMAN RUSHDIE
PROLOGUE
PART ONE
THE BANANA-FISH BOY
A CITY BUILT OF SPACE
I CUT EVELYN WAUGH’S HAIR
WHERE THE FROGS MEET TO MATE
UNDER THE EAVES
HUMMING-BIRD SUCKING HONEY
PART TWO
WARONAWA
BLUE EYES MEAN IGNORANCE
A BLAST OF HEAT
THE GIANT GRASSHOPPER
DEER HUNT
THE LONG WAIT
CONVENT DAYS
THE EVANGELIST
AN AFFAIR
ROCK-STONE
THE MASTER OF FISH
THE DIRTY FACE OF THE MOON
THE RIVER OF THE DEAD
SAVANNAH ECLIPSE
THE GREAT FALL
SILENCE
THE WEDDING
KANAIMA
FIRE-BURN
ASYLUM
STAR-FIELD
THE ICE COFFIN
SINGULARITY
PART THREE
A TAPIR FOR A WIFE
RAINSTORM
BABOONS MAKING COFFEE
DINNER AT THE HIGH COMMISSION
LOVE GONE A FISH
THE AMERINDIAN HOSTEL
EPILOGUE