Letter to Doug Holder from Errol Lincoln Uys
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Of this work, distinguished Brazilian critic Wilson Martins wrote: \u201cUys accomplished what no Brazilian author from José de Alencar to João Ubaldo Ribeiro and Jorge Amado was able to do. He is the first to write our national epic in its entirety. He is the first outsider to see us with total honesty and sympathy. Descriptions like those of the war with Paraguay are unsurpassed in our literature and evoke the great passages of 'War and Peace.'\u201d
'Brazil' won the highest critical acclaim in the United Kingdom, Germany and France, where it was a bestseller ('La Forteresse Verte.')
Said 'Le Figaro:' \u201cNo one before Uys knew how to bring to life Brazil and her history. Uys\u2019s characters are brilliant and colorful, combining elements of the best swashbuckler with those worthy of deepest reflection. Most stunning is that it took a South African now a naturalized American, to evoke so perfectly the grand but interrupted dream that is Brazil.\u201d
'L\u2019Express' concurred: \u201cA masterpiece! 'Brazil' has the feel of an enchanted virgin forest, a totally new and original world for the reader-explorer to discover.\u201d
'Publisher\u2019s Weekly' described 'Brazil' as \u201cPulsing with vigor, this is a vast novel to tell the story of a vast country. The principal characters, both real and imaginary, are hard to forget . . . Uys re-creates history almost entirely \u2018at ground level,\u2019 even more densely than Michener.\u201d
Uys has also written the non-fiction book, 'Riding the Rails: Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression.' The 'Boston Globe' praised this work as \u201cA riveting document of hope and hardship. The reader can all but hear the cadence of the trains on the tracks and the lonesome wail at every whistle-stop.\u201d 'Riding the Rails' was chosen as one of the \u201c10 Best Books of 1999\u201d by Amazon\u2019s history editor.
Uys was ten when he wrote 'Revenge,' a novella penned on the back of worthless stock certificates tossed out by his mother. After high school, he worked as a law clerk for two years before becoming a reporter on the Johannesburg 'Star.' His next job was as editor of the Cape Town edition of 'Post,' then South Africa's biggest weekly among its African and mixed-race population.
Moving to London, he was chief reporter for the 'South East London Mercury,' before joining 'Reader's Digest' in England. The magazine sent him back to Africa, where he founded the first South African editorial office, becoming editor-in-chief in 1972.
Five years later, he moved to the United States with his family, joining the 'Digest's' world headquarters as a senior international editor.
In 1977, the Digest assigned him to work with James A. Michener on his South African novel, 'The Covenant', a controversial collaboration covered in 'Working with James Michener,' doucmented on Uys's website.
He has been a resident of Massachusetts since 1981 and currently lives in Dorchester, Boston.
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