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Based on the book review, it is correct to affirm about Chico Buarque that
Based on the book review, it is correct to affirm about Chico Buarque that
Read the following text to answer question
Spilt Milk by Chico Buarque: review
A mishmash of influences gives rise to a vivid portrait of Brazil
Chico Buarque, bossanovista and novelist, whose latest book is ‘Spilt Milk’ Photo: Sipa Press / Rex Features
By Ian Thomson
Back in the Sixties, Brazil thrilled to a new dance beat called bossa nova. With its languid
jazz tones, the music had a hushed intensity and underlying air of sadness. Chico Buarque, a
leading bossanovistasongwriter and novelist, is revered in Brazil as a political hero. In 1968, he
was imprisoned by the military for “counter-culture activities”.
Spilt Milk, Buarque’s fourth novel, displays a typically Brazilian mishmash of influences ranging from memoir to adventure to political diatribe. A crotchety old man, Eulálio d’Assumpção, lies
moribund in a Rio de Janeiro hospital, musing on his life while lashing out at stenographers
and “spiteful” orderlies. The food, we learn, reeks unpleasantly of garlic (“Wait till my mother
finds out”).
Aged 150, he has come down in the world wretchedly. In pages of rambling monologue, the
improbably old narrator describes the decline of his family over generations of Brazilian history.
Amid sagas of political tribalism and grievous dictatorship, plantation-owning forebears have
squandered fortunes on drink, drugs and armament deals. A souring smell of “spilt milk” hangs
over the narrative as it twists round half-remembered family feuds and hatreds.
Along the way, Buarque paints an exceptionally vivid picture of Brazilian high society in the
1890s, with its German governesses, imported French clothes and Chopin waltzes. Though bedbound and drugged, Eulálio recalls the love of his life, Matilde, whose cinnamon-coloured skin
and “Moorish eyes” had worked a fatal charm on him years ago. Where is she now?
At first glance, Spilt Milk appears to be in narrative disarray, as the book wanders backwards and
forwards in time. Eventually, though, the inchoate strands cohere into an absorbing, if bitter,
meditation on Brazil.
Just as bossa nova had borrowed from samba and West Coast jazz, so Buarque borrows from
Samuel Beckett, Gabriel García Marquez and others. In a now-famous book of 1928, Manifesto
Antropófago, Brazil’s leading modernist poet Oswald de Andrade had defined Brazilian literature
as anthropophagic, or cannibalistic, “eating” other forms of European and African writing. Spilt
Milk, brocaded with a range of literary influences, conforms to the ideal beautifully.
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/fictionreviews/9573627/Spilt-Milk-by-Chico-Buarque-review.html
Read the following text to answer question
Spilt Milk by Chico Buarque: review
A mishmash of influences gives rise to a vivid portrait of Brazil
Chico Buarque, bossanovista and novelist, whose latest book is ‘Spilt Milk’ Photo: Sipa Press / Rex Features
By Ian Thomson
Back in the Sixties, Brazil thrilled to a new dance beat called bossa nova. With its languid
jazz tones, the music had a hushed intensity and underlying air of sadness. Chico Buarque, a
leading bossanovistasongwriter and novelist, is revered in Brazil as a political hero. In 1968, he
was imprisoned by the military for “counter-culture activities”.
Spilt Milk, Buarque’s fourth novel, displays a typically Brazilian mishmash of influences ranging from memoir to adventure to political diatribe. A crotchety old man, Eulálio d’Assumpção, lies
moribund in a Rio de Janeiro hospital, musing on his life while lashing out at stenographers
and “spiteful” orderlies. The food, we learn, reeks unpleasantly of garlic (“Wait till my mother
finds out”).
Aged 150, he has come down in the world wretchedly. In pages of rambling monologue, the
improbably old narrator describes the decline of his family over generations of Brazilian history.
Amid sagas of political tribalism and grievous dictatorship, plantation-owning forebears have
squandered fortunes on drink, drugs and armament deals. A souring smell of “spilt milk” hangs
over the narrative as it twists round half-remembered family feuds and hatreds.
Along the way, Buarque paints an exceptionally vivid picture of Brazilian high society in the
1890s, with its German governesses, imported French clothes and Chopin waltzes. Though bedbound and drugged, Eulálio recalls the love of his life, Matilde, whose cinnamon-coloured skin
and “Moorish eyes” had worked a fatal charm on him years ago. Where is she now?
At first glance, Spilt Milk appears to be in narrative disarray, as the book wanders backwards and
forwards in time. Eventually, though, the inchoate strands cohere into an absorbing, if bitter,
meditation on Brazil.
Just as bossa nova had borrowed from samba and West Coast jazz, so Buarque borrows from
Samuel Beckett, Gabriel García Marquez and others. In a now-famous book of 1928, Manifesto
Antropófago, Brazil’s leading modernist poet Oswald de Andrade had defined Brazilian literature
as anthropophagic, or cannibalistic, “eating” other forms of European and African writing. Spilt
Milk, brocaded with a range of literary influences, conforms to the ideal beautifully.
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/fictionreviews/9573627/Spilt-Milk-by-Chico-Buarque-review.html
A
he has been writing books and songs for more than three decades and although Spilt Milk
is his fourth novel it is the first one in which he blends both his songwriting and political
activity
B
bossa nova, Gabriel García Márquez and other writers inspired him to write Spilt Milk main
characters and to define their inner values.
C
his previous political activities were paramount in endorsing him to collect his own recall and
backing the main structure of the book.
D
he is infamous worldwide for his counter-culture anti-military service activities and is therefore
accounted as a hero.
E
he has shown in his fourth novel a literary influence by writers such as Gabriel García
Márquez and others.