
"Revelatory . . . An aching, dreamlike immersion." --Carl Hoffman, The Washington Post
"An intensely powerful work about revolution, compromise, and long-buried secrets . . . A haunting, compelling book." --Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders
An atmospheric novel about a father and son in the waning days of colonial Mozambique by the winner of the 2025 PEN/Nabokov Award
"Revelatory . . . [The Cartographer of Absences is] a mystery and a love story, an aching, dreamlike immersion into the violent absurdities and racism of Portuguese colonialism in Africa . . . Yet there's beauty here, too, in the writing and in the humanity of those surviving in such a world . . . The narrative thickens, layer upon layer, into a foreboding that feels anxiously fresh." --Carl Hoffman, The Washington Post
"In its temporally fragmented structure and use of found documents, Mia Couto's newly translated novel feels like a new direction for him. It's also an intensely powerful work about revolution, compromise, and long-buried secrets--one that both explores Mozambique's troubled colonial history and raises big questions about ideals and sacrifice. A haunting, compelling book." --Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders "In the rich latest from Couto, a poet reckons with the colonial history of Mozambique . . . Revelations of murder and suicide shade the final act, which is made all the more gripping by a cyclone bearing down on the country. This packs a punch." --Publishers Weekly "Couto's storytelling is rich, while delivering a straightforward message: 'When a regime starts arresting poets it is because that regime has lost its way' . . . A contemplative study of colonialism's collapse, and its enduring legacy." --Kirkus Reviews "We finish this haunting and perceptive novel aware that memory or bearing witness might not be the only essential ingredients in coming to terms with the past." --World Literature Today