sexta-feira, 9 de maio de 2025

“The Angels Forgotten by God”: the groundbreaking novel by Antônio Carlos dos Santos


          Some books are born of talent, others of observation and sensitivity, and a few—rarer still—emerge from intense lived experience, from the sweat shed in invisible trenches, from the restless pulse of a soul committed to the fate of its people. Such is the case of the novel The Angels Forgotten by God, by writer and educator Antônio Carlos dos Santos. A creative and powerful work, it breaks through the conventional boundaries of Brazilian fiction by combining literary narrative, sharp social critique, and field experience—not from the comfort of academic offices, but from rural fields, improvised stages, and public squares energized by grassroots movements.

Unlike what is expected of a writer—who typically opts for light or poetic texts as a way to enter the literary world—Antônio Carlos chose the novel as his battlefield. This choice, far from being mere boldness, reveals a conviction: literature has the power to transform, to denounce, and to symbolically rebuild human dignity. In this case, the novel is not just an aesthetic form, but a tool of resistance—a new kind of activism, now using words, characters, and plots as instruments of resistance and hope.

The narrative of The Angels Forgotten by God echoes a raw, unidealized reality, lived in the first person. The author, whose story is marked by his passion for political theater in the 1970s and his artistic activism through the puppet theater Teatro de Bonecos Mané Beiçudo (TBMB), brings to the page the same expressive force he once brought to the stage and the streets. As Eduardo Jordão recalls when portraying the author in his early years of struggle, theater was his first love, through which he led young people, denounced injustice, and dreamed of a more humane Brazil. That same revolutionary energy pulses through the book, which presents characters marked by exclusion, yet full of dignity, hope, and a yearning for change.

The plot centers on real-life characters—landless peasants, exploited workers, marginalized women—and is woven in a vibrant, living language, heavily influenced by orality and popular knowledge. The power of the book’s language is one of its high points. Antônio Carlos masterfully captures the speech of ordinary people, turning everyday talk into a vehicle for emotion, humor, and resistance. Readers find themselves immersed in the portrayed communities, hearing their sounds, sharing their scents, their sorrows, and their dreams. This sensory and emotional immersion would not be possible without the author's authentic experience with these groups, with whom he shared real-life experiences and deep commitments.

But the book is not just a vehicle of denunciation. Antônio Carlos possesses the rare skill of interweaving brutal scenes—such as shootouts, clashes with militias, and political betrayals—with moments of great lyricism, subtle eroticism, and even biting humor. This multiplicity of tones makes the work both accessible and engaging, allowing even readers unfamiliar with socially engaged literature to be moved and to reflect. In this balance, the author reveals himself not just as an activist for freedom, but as a literary artist fully aware of the aesthetic and educational power of art.

From a neuroscientific perspective, we know that powerful narratives, like those of Antônio Carlos, can activate multiple brain regions, especially the prefrontal cortex and the limbic system—areas responsible for moral reasoning, empathy, and decision-making (Immordino-Yang & Damasio, 2007). In other words, The Angels Forgotten by God not only informs: it emotionally and cognitively mobilizes the reader, provoking shifts in mindset and fostering readiness for action—central aspects of the MAT methodology (Mindset, Action, and Theater), also developed by the author in his pedagogical, social, and corporate work.

This connection between literature, education, and social transformation becomes even clearer when we observe the full range of Antônio Carlos’s methodologies. MAT proposes a combination of critical reflection, concrete action, and theatrical experience as a means of transformative learning. Theater Movement (ThM), in turn, presents the moving body as a site of resistance and political expression. The TBMB (Teatro de Bonecos Mané Beiçudo) uses the popular puppet figure from commedia dell’arte as a vehicle for critique and humor, reaching audiences of all ages and backgrounds through a symbolic and accessible language. These methodologies are in direct dialogue with the novel, not only as a backdrop, but as the philosophical and practical structure that gives soul to the characters and narrative.

When reading The Angels Forgotten by God, the reader does not find idealized heroes or caricatured villains, but human beings with their contradictions, ethical dilemmas, daily defeats, and small victories. It is within this critical realism that the beauty of the work resides. As in the tradition of the great Latin American social novels—from García Márquez to Jorge Amado—Antônio Carlos reminds us that literature can be a powerful weapon in the fight against invisibility, a mirror that both denounces and invites action.

The novel also helps us understand, in a didactic and sensitive way, the phenomenon of social exclusion and structural injustice in Brazil. Data from the Pastoral Land Commission and IBGE show that land conflicts, forced evictions, and violence against rural leaders remain an open wound in the country. By humanizing these statistics—giving them faces, voices, and stories—The Angels Forgotten by God contributes to emotional and ethical education, one of the most urgent tasks of our time.

By the end of the book, it is impossible not to feel moved, not to reflect, and above all, not to ask oneself: what am I doing to change this reality? Antônio Carlos reminds us, through his words and life story, that we can all be protagonists of transformation—that every gesture, whether on stage, in a book, or in a classroom, matters. His novel is more than a portrayal of suffering: it is a call to active hope. It is a summons for us to be the angels who do not forget others, in a world that often does.

Thus, The Angels Forgotten by God is not just a book. It is a seed. A seed that, when it falls on fertile soil—the soil of the reader’s mind and heart—can germinate new ways of seeing, feeling, and acting. As a passionate educator and devoted writer, the author teaches: “this work is a provocation, a challenge for everyone to rise up and say ‘no’ to the glaring injustice that humiliates Brazil, Latin America, and African nations.”

Access the books by Antônio Carlos dos Santos on amazon.com or amazon.com.br

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