This text has been automatically translated from Turkish. Show Original
"Muriel.... I have to stay... My wife will leave.."
"Leave my wife alone. Besides, did you tell her beforehand that you were black?"
Dan's face hardened. He was breathing with difficulty.
"Don't say that again," he said. "I wouldn't recommend it to you."
(Front Cover)
'All the Dead Have the Same Skin' is the obligatory sequel to 'I Spit on Your Graves'. Lee was a genuine Black man who, thanks to his white skin, was able to get in among the Whites and quench his relentless thirst for revenge against them. Dan in All the Dead Have the Same Skin is White, but he believes he is Black in blood. He reflects his hatred towards white people through his actions. He glorifies himself as the bully of a famous nightclub, and without realizing that he is slowly identifying with the White race that oppresses the Blacks, he hits and has sex with women as much as he can in that nightclub.
This novel, written by Boris Vian under the signature of Vernon Sullivan, in which he lists himself as the translator of the book and criticizes the critics in the introduction he wrote to the book, is the story of an eccentric person who joins a foreign community and turns away from his fellow citizens. sü It should not be read as. Behind the incident, we see social problems that rarely come to the surface in the lower layers of a rich country.
'All Dead People Have the Same Skin' A novel like an elegy written against racism...
(From the Promotional Bulletin)