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Feast Days

por Ian MacKenzie

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A young wife relocates with her financier husband to Sô Paulo, where she encounters crime, protests, refugees, gentrification, and the collision of art and commerce while confronting the crisis slowly building inside her own marriage.
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Feast Days by Ian MacKenzie is a novel about a young upwardly mobile couple transferred to Sao Paulo, Brazil. MacKenzie's first novel was City of Strangers and his fiction has appeared in The Gettysburg Review, The Greensboro Review, and elsewhere. He was born and raised in Massachusetts, graduated from Harvard College, and has lived in New York City, Ethiopia, and Brazil.

I do not review much contemporary fiction because it seems to be written for instant entertainment without much depth or lasting memory. Feast Days is something different and, yes like many reviews have already said, it does deal with a young American couple in Brazil. He is an investment banker and she is trapped in a foreign country without much marketable skills or a visa that would allow her to work. The descriptions of Brazil are accurate. The division between the rich in their walled complexes and the poor in their shantytowns is very clear. Among the rich Brazilians, there is also a status competition. Emma, the American woman, works for friends teaching English. Having a tutor is a status symbol, even if one doesn't really need one.

There is crime on the streets. There is corruption in business and government. There are protests and protests that turn into riots. Children of the rich are joining in the fight if not for the movement for the thrill. Haitian immigrants legal and illegal are protected by the parish priests and become the new outcasts giving the poor someone to target. A great deal is given to the division of the people and to the chaos of society outside walled complexes.

The most interesting thing I found and what kept me digging into the story is the narrator. The cover flap will tell the reader her name is Emma. You will only find her name once in the text. Her husband does not refer to her by name nor do her Brazilain friends. Perhaps she is just another American woman with no value except as a status symbol tutor or wife. Equally interesting is her husband. He is never referred to by name. When they were dating Emma refers to him as "the man who would become my husband." She addresses and refers to him as "my husband" throughout the rest of the book. No one addresses him by name. Perhaps he too is just another Yankee in a foreign country. There for a while then replaced with another equally forgettable person. This makes the book far more interesting to me than I originally expected. It added depth to the story that made it much more than just a story. ( )
  evil_cyclist | Mar 16, 2020 |
Ian MacKenzie's 'Feast Days', a novel considerably outside my normal circle of genres, is a sort of trifling thing. If you're interested in following the travails of a couple young, affluent NYC-type ex-pats as they learn the ropes around Sao Paolo, Brazil by partying at nightclubs, dining at high end restaurants, and visiting art galleries while ruminating on poverty, it may well be up your alley.

Feast Days is largely a collection of episodes. Couple visits a bar, runs into man's co-worker. They talk about work. Couple gets mugged on way home, causing much discussion and thoughts about the nature and unfairness of wealth and absence of same. Woman gets interested in political riots taking place in the city. Man works late. Woman may or may not decide to have a baby. Woman may or may not decide to have an affair. Couple goes on vacation.... I'm quite sure there's a message buried in there somewhere, but I think you need to care about the characters enough to try to figure out what it is and, alas, I couldn't get there.

What I did enjoy, though, was MacKenzie's writing. It has a sort of DeLillo feel to it: mostly crisp, short sentences that create a staccato feel for the narrative. Thankfully, Feast Days is short, so although I liked the writing, the story was over quickly. ( )
  gmmartz | Aug 10, 2018 |
Feast Days by Ian MacKenzie is the story of Emma, a young wife who follows her husband as his career takes him to São Paulo, Brazil. Unfortunately, I am not the reader for this book. For me, it seems to try a little too hard to be literary, poetic, etc. I am neither captured by the character of Emma nor immersed in the sights and sounds of São Paulo.

Read my complete review at http://www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2018/07/feast-days.html

Reviewed for NetGalley ( )
  njmom3 | Jul 16, 2018 |
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A young wife relocates with her financier husband to Sô Paulo, where she encounters crime, protests, refugees, gentrification, and the collision of art and commerce while confronting the crisis slowly building inside her own marriage.

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