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Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon
Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon
Jorge Amado | 2005 | Contemporary, Fiction & Poetry
(0 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Amado is the best Brazilian writer. He portrayed the Brazilian spirit to the world."

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Ciro Guerra recommended Bacurau (2019) in Movies (curated)

 
Bacurau (2019)
Bacurau (2019)
2019 | Adventure, Horror, Mystery
(0 Ratings)
Movie Favorite

"In a year where Brazilian cinema is under serious threat of death from its own government, watching and celebrating it is a must."

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Bola de Sabão by Maria Rui
Bola de Sabão by Maria Rui
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Melody wins, every time. This kind of lazy tunefulness is the mark of Maria Rui, and I would say in a larger sense, Brazilian acoustic pop itself. You will not find a deeper field of talented songwriters and effortless singers anywhere else in the world. The language is Portuguese, but the Brazilian flavor lives in the soft g sound we have in "bourgeois"; once you can pick it out it's like pepper on this gorgeous salad of notes.
  
Getz/Gilberto by Stan Getz / Joao Gilberto
Getz/Gilberto by Stan Getz / Joao Gilberto
1964 | Jazz
7
8.0 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 447th greatest album of all time
Interesting Brazilian soft jazz album. Features jazz standards "The Girl from Ipanema" (you will recognise it!) and the lovely little song from this sketch:
  
The Second Mother (2015)
The Second Mother (2015)
2015 | Comedy, Drama
(0 Ratings)
Movie Favorite

"This Brazilian film explores the way that social class divisions inform and confine us, and the horrified responses that can erupt when someone pushes back against that. It examines precisely how change can happen in small increments, leading to a definite and satisfying result."

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Black Orpheus (Orfeu Negro) by Luiz Bonfa
Black Orpheus (Orfeu Negro) by Luiz Bonfa
1959
(0 Ratings)
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"This is from a fantastic 1950s film that exposed Brazilian music to the outside world. It's the story of Orpheus set to Brazilian carnival, and it's very beautiful, melancholic, and full of these really captivating rhythms. I got into it first on tour doing OK Computer, a time where I felt very lost, personally and emotionally, which felt ridiculous when I was on the top of the world with my band. Inside, I needed to sort my shit out, and this album allowed me to cry. A few years later, my first son kicked for the first time when he heard his, and that's why we called him Salvador.
"

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Kleber Mendonca recommended Limit (1931) in Movies (curated)

 
Limit (1931)
Limit (1931)
1931 | Drama, Romance
(0 Ratings)
Movie Favorite

"Saulo Pereira de Mello just passed away this week at ninety-two. He’s the archivist who worked for years on Mario Peixoto’s legacy on film and in writing. Mr. Pereira de Mello also played a major role in the difficult restoration of this ninety-year-old Brazilian dream masterpiece, which can be discovered by so many through Criterion."

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Robert Dawson recommended Genesis in Books (curated)

 
Genesis
Genesis
Sebastiao Salgado, Lella Salgado | 2013 | Art, Photography & Fashion
(0 Ratings)
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"After our son Walker couch-surfed in Rio last year, we felt obliged to take in one of the Brazilian friends he met. She brought a copy of Sebastião Salgado’s beautiful but expensive book Genesis. We felt bad because she doesn’t have a lot of money and also because it is in Portuguese. However, 95% of the book consists of Salgado’s brilliant photographs, which need no translation. It seems that the people with the least often give the most."

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Whit Stillman recommended Black Orpheus (1959) in Movies (curated)

 
Black Orpheus (1959)
Black Orpheus (1959)
1959 | Drama, Fantasy, Musical
9.8 (4 Ratings)
Movie Favorite

"I love films that are great not only in themselves but in the idea of them that stays in memory. But this then can dwarf the actual film, which perhaps it has in the case of Black Orpheus—some aspects now try one’s patience slightly. A few years back a Brazilian film was touted as the realistic and gritty version of the story, by those who knew the actual milieu—another black eye for realism and grit."

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I took a chance on this book, based on the fact that Lucinda Riley is one of my friends' favourite authors. It's not something that I'd normally choose to read, but I'm glad I did. It's a really interesting story of how one of six adopted sisters, Maia, finds out about her birth family after the death of her adopted father. He leaves her some clues to help her, which to be fair, are pretty vague, and she enlists the help of a Brazilian author (whose books she translates from Portuguese to French) who also happens to be an historian.
Luckily, her adoptive father was very wealthy, and she has no financial need to find her birth family, but it must be nice when she discovers that they are an old Brazilian family, who were once very rich, and are now just plain old wealthy.
Maia also has a secret of her own in her past, one that has made her shut herself away from the world, and this trip to Brazil appears to be the start of her healing herself.
It's a lovely story, and I think I'll be keeping my eyes open for the other books in the series.
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my copy of this book to read and fairly review.