Description: "An allegorical coming-of-age story told in a trusting and curious voice . . . Damas keeps us enthralled as [François] unravels the family mystery." --BBC
Brief description: Jody Gladding's translations include Jean Giono's Serpent of Stars and Pierre Michon's Small Lives, which won the Florence Gould and French-American Foundation Translation Prize. Her collections of poems include Stone Crop, which was chosen by James Dickey for the Yale Series of Younger Poets in 1993, as well as Rooms and their Airs and Translations from Bark Beetle. Gladding has also been a Stegner Fellow at Stanford, Poet-in-Residence at The Frost Place, and has received a Whiting Writers' Award. Her work also includes collaborative site-specific installations that explore the interface of language and ecology. She directs the Writing Program at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson, Vermont.
Review Quotes: Praise for If You Cross the River
An allegorical coming-of-age story told in a trusting and curious voice . . . Damas keeps us enthralled as [François] unravels the family mystery. --BBC [An] excellent novel . . . Readers will connect immediately with François and yearn, as he does, to uncover what happened across the river . . . [If You Cross the River] packs a satisfactory punch. --Shelf Awareness As translated by American poet Gladding, [François's] authentically rendered thoughts, startling discoveries, and creeping awareness of danger make for an intriguing, fable-like tale of words' capacity to liberate. --Booklist Jody Gladding's translation of If You Cross the River by Geneviève Damas shows remarkable skill and delicacy of touch, resulting in a text that is vivid, elegant, and profound. --Honorable Mention, 2020 PEN Translation Prize "Geneviève Damas's voice is on the border between silence and language, the message and the truth. This novel is a tribute to the liberating power of literature."--Jury Citation, Prix des Cinq Continents de la Francophonie (France) "In If You Cross the River, François's love for the world's tenderest things is so deftly rendered that we worry for anything he cares for--beloved pigs, a caring priest--and long for what he longs for: to use books to cross to a safer place. A thrilling and dazzling fable that expertly reflects the sometimes brutal, sometimes joyful terrain of adolescent awakening."--Marie-Helene Bertino, author of 2 a.m. at the Cat's Pajamas "Damas has created an intimate coming-of-age story at the center of which is a mystery that makes this novel impossible to put down. As she brings to life a child's struggle to navigate adult violence and learn to read, she allows us to rediscover the transformative and redemptive power of language itself--the ways that words can connect us to others beyond the pain of our solitude."--Deni Ellis Béchard, author of White "The power of words and filiation are at the heart of this novel, which tells the story of a seventeen-year-old boy who tries to extricate himself from a miserable life by learning to read and seeking to elucidate the mystery of his birth."--La Presse (Canada) "Geneviève Damas writes with such intensity, such fluidity. This extraordinary novel is suffused with silence, loneliness, violence, and the desire to escape a miserable life, a deep desire to know oneself and others. We are both seduced and upset by this touching story, which is not hard to imagine on the big screen."--Espace Musique (Canada) "Magnificent and engaging, If You Cross the River is off the beaten track."--Le Soir (Belgium) "To describe the plot would be to deprive readers of the emotional journey Geneviève Damas invites us into with breathtaking mastery. As with all great novels, this one holds the reader until the last word, and the protagonist's questions--about illiteracy, family secrets, mourning, loneliness, and tenderness--become our own."--Demandez le Programme (Belgium) "This short novel creates a whole world in itself."--Romanesque (Belgium) "Geneviève Damas's first novel is a masterpiece. The spirit of generosity at the core of this book is staggering."--Marginales (France)