The Collector of Leftover Souls, by Eliane Brum, tells the stories of lives no one sees, people generally marginalized or ignored by the rest of society. The book draws from Eliane’s years as a reporter first in her home state of Rio Grande do Sul and later in São Paulo and the Amazon. Some of these stories feature the traditional forest peoples of a territory known as Middle Earth, the midwives who catch babies in the Amazon, a former factory worker whose lungs, and life, were stolen by asbestos, and a young man who participates in an annual farm show in Rio Grande mounted on a hobby horse.
The English translation by Diane Whitty was published by Graywolf (US) and Granta (UK) in 2019, when the title was long-listed for a National Book Award in Translation.
Author bio
Eliane Brum is a writer, journalist, and documentary filmmaker currently based in the Amazon. She is director of the trilingual journalism platform Sumaúma, author of Banzeiro Òkòtó and The Collector of Leftover Souls, as well as seven other books, co-founder of the Rainforest Journalism Fund, and columnist for El País.
Translator bio
Diane Whitty has translated more than a dozen nonfiction books from the Portuguese, including The Collector of Leftover Souls and Banzeiro Òkòtó by Eliane Brum, Activist Biology by Regina Horta Duarte, and Our Immoral Soul by Nilton Bonder. Her translations have appeared in the Guardian, the New York Times, the Paris Review, Granta, Harper’s, Atmos, and Glossalaia.
Links to buy book: https://www.graywolfpress.org/books/collector-leftover-souls or https://granta.com/products/the-collector-of-leftover-souls/
Praise for The Collector of Leftover Souls
Eliane Brum makes her English debut with a profoundly challenging collection of portraits detailing the lives of those who are othered by mainstream Brazilian society and the dominant global order that feeds it. She asks us on every page to contemplate the privileged gaze-hers as well as our own-and to consider how it might be transformed into art and, ultimately, action.
- Francisco Cantú, author of The Line Becomes a River
With lyricism and heart, renowned journalist Eliane Brum draws us into the lives of everyday Brazilians and their stories, until we see not one Brazil but many, each filled with nuance, contradictions, color, beauty and life. Brum's empathic, unflinching reporting bears witness to her subjects' loves and losses, their seething anger and their extraordinary grace. Thanks to Brum, the forgotten are remembered, the voiceless have a storyteller, and the meek have inherited a vast and irreducible space in our collective imagination.
- Frances de Pontes Peebles, author of The Air You Breathe
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