Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Fiction

Fordlândia

Avoiding cliché in Brazil

Everything Lost, Everything Found by Matthew Hooton

by Kirsten Tranter
June 2025, no. 476

Everything Lost, Everything Found by Matthew Hooton

Fourth Estate, $34.99 pb, 290 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

We meet Matthew Hooton’s narrator Jack as an old man in urban Michigan. Jack has lived his adult life in this mid-western place and has seen the manufacturing boom of the American twentieth century flourish, expand, and collapse. His body struggles with all the mundane realities of old age – a fall that bruises a hip, the struggle to climb out of a car – while he navigates the decline of his beloved wife in a hospice. His mind is elsewhere in time and space, forever captive to the trauma and wonder he lived through as a child in Brazil. He sees imaginary vines trailing the edges of things, searches for papaya at the grocery store, and makes do with Floridian oranges. It is ‘unsettling to live in a nation of plenty’, Jack observes, ‘and yet find oneself constantly seeking substitutes for that which brought the senses alive as a child’. The narrative shifts back and forth along with Jack’s thoughts, focusing largely on his childhood in the 1920s in the bizarre and ultimately doomed settlement founded by Henry Ford in Brazil named Fordlândia. In this outpost of American culture and within Ford’s brand of strict Christian morality, settlers tried and failed to carry out Ford’s dream of cultivating rubber plantations.

 


Continue reading for only $10 per month.
Subscribe and gain full access to Australian Book Review.

Already a subscriber? .
If you need assistance, feel free to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..



Everything Lost, Everything Found by Matthew Hooton

Fourth Estate, $34.99 pb, 290 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


From the New Issue

Walking Sydney: Sydney, by its writers by Belinda Castles

by Phillipa McGuinness

Our Story: A long multicultural past edited by Zhou Xiaoping

by Lynette Russell

Letters – October 2025

by Eli McLean, Theodore Ell, Ben Brooker, et al.

You May Also Like

by Laurie Clancy

The Business of Books by James Raven

by Graham Tulloch

Leave a comment

If you are an ABR subscriber, you will need to sign in to post a comment.

If you have forgotten your sign in details, or if you receive an error message when trying to submit your comment, please email your comment (and the name of the article to which it relates) to ABR Comments. We will review your comment and, subject to approval, we will post it under your name.

Please note that all comments must be approved by ABR and comply with our Terms & Conditions.

Submit comment