Dèy
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected 25 Aug 2026
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- 99,00 kr
Publisher Description
From the bestselling author of Everything Inside comes a vivid, timely story, moving from Haiti to Brooklyn to Miami, of a woman whose sense of self and family are called into question when she gets caught in a random act of violence one sunny Florida day.
“Is home the place where we are born? Or is it the place where we die?” These questions haunt Magnolia, a successful Haitian American real estate agent in Miami. When she hears gunfire while at a shopping mall, she takes shelter in a nearby restaurant, cowering with fellow shoppers and diners. Once she’s safely home, Magnolia keeps this traumatic event from everyone. But given her life back, she begins to see everything clearly: her extraordinary bond with her daughter, Zoë; her nearly broken relationship with Zoë’s father; the challenges of her mentally troubled mother, whose unraveling patterns Magnolia worries she’s spiraling toward herself; and her father’s affair with a woman who has borne him a child. While struggling through the labyrinth of her past, Magnolia must also come to terms with the losses sustained that life-altering day, and nearly every day by her parents and sibling in Haiti.
Can love or family protect us from harm? Does optimism or fear win out in one’s heart? Which side will prevail for Magnolia? Pulled between these questions, each of which involves a high-stakes choice—Miami or Haiti, single or married, mortal or ghost, before or after—Magnolia is a narrator who is “yon pati koukouy, part firefly”: flitting and shimmering between different worlds.
Taking as its title a Haitian Kreyòl word for mourning, Dèy is a profoundly warm and moving novel about the importance not only of sharing grief but also of inseverable family ties. Brave and striking, Dèy is one of Danticat’s most powerful and deeply affecting works yet, told with her signature “unfaltering voice and evocative beauty” (The Boston Globe).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A Haitian American woman reckons with the cost of hiding her pain in this illuminating novel from Danticat, winner of the NBCC award for Everything Inside. Magnolia, a Miami real estate agent, is shopping for her daughter Zöe's 10th birthday when a gunman opens fire in the mall's food court. She takes cover and survives the episode but, for reasons she can't articulate even to herself, doesn't mention her involvement to anyone. She suppresses her trauma response and her private fascination with the victims, including a Haitian immigrant like her parents, and goes about her business, planning Zöe's birthday party, closing a real estate deal, and preparing to host her parents and younger half brother. Life in Haiti, where her parents repatriated after raising Magnolia in Brooklyn, has grown increasingly dangerous, and they've surrendered their family home to corrupt politicians and the gangs protecting them. The dread of encroaching violence runs through Magnolia's first-person narration, as does the subject of home: she worries that her job as a realtor is contributing to Miami's gentrification, and faces uncertainty over living apart from Zöe's father during a trial separation and where her aging parents will go. Arranging the narrative into sections titled after shelter-in-place instructions ("Run," "Hide," and "F(l)ight," followed by a final section titled "Dèy," the Haitian Creole word for mourning), Danticat delivers a resounding testament to the strength gained by sharing, whether in celebration, fear, grief, or family memories. This delicate and wonderful novel draws beauty from heartache.