In the late 19th century, Paris became the destination of choice for a curious mix of Brazilian asylum seekers. The Royal family chased out of Brazil after the 1889 Republican coup d’état, led the group, followed by the Republicans themselves, who feared the excesses of the military insurgents. Simultaneously, France welcomed the arrival of a handful of businessmen who fled the catastrophic consequences of the first financial crisis of the newly proclaimed Republic of the United States of Brazil.
This irreconcilable refugee community at the height of the Parisian Belle Époque sets the scene for Maurício Torres Assumpção’s debut novel that tells the story of two main characters. The first, Sebastião Constantino do Rosário, known as Tino, is a young black man, the son of a French priest and a Brazilian slave, who flees to France after being accused of a crime he did not commit. His antagonist, Baron Antônio Lopes de Carvalho, moves to Paris when the new Republican government accuses him of financial fraud following the burst of the Brazilian stock market bubble, leaving thousands of small investors penniless.