The Book of Jamaica The Book of Jamaica

The Book of Jamaica

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Publisher Description

""A truly excellent novel. . . . The morbidly fascinating little twists of human existence are all here: love, sex, life and death, beauty and horror—the works."" — Chicago Sun-Times

In The Book of Jamaica, Russell Banks explores the complexities of political life in the Caribbean and its ever-present racial conflicts.

His narrator, a thirty-five-year-old college professor from New Hampshire, goes to Jamaica to write a novel and soon becomes embroiled in the struggles between whites and Blacks. He is especially interested in an ancient tribe called the Maroons, descendants of the Ashanti, who had been enslaved by the Spanish and then fought the British in a hundred-year war. Despite this history of oppression, the Maroons have managed to maintain a relatively autonomous existence in Jamaica. Partly out of guilt and an intellectual sense of social responsibility, Banks's narrator gets involved in reuniting two clans who have been feuding for generations. Unfortunately, his attempt ends in disaster, and the narrator must deal with his feelings of alienation, isolation, and failure.

GENRE
Fiction
NARRATOR
ND
Norman Dietz
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
11:34
hr min
RELEASED
2013
November 12
PUBLISHER
HarperAudio
SIZE
500.8
MB

Customer Reviews

mollyk1111 ,

43 years….

Fourty three years ago this book was written, yet it presents as timeless. I will forever mourn the loss of this multifacited, mindnumbingly gifted writer. Russell Banks seamlessly writes with the sophistication of a poet and the grit, and soul, of the subjacent working class. I wonder if the world will ever fully know the gravity of what they had been given in him. One of the greats.