by Jamaica Kincaid, Dominique Peters, Carme Geronès
0.0 out of 5 (0 reviews)
The West Indian narrator vents her bitterness at the unhappy life fate dealt her--mother died in childbirth, father ignored her, stepmother tried to kill her, at school she had an abortion. Finally, she married a white doctor, but it was impossible for her to love him because he was a colonialist. She draws parallels with the despair of her country--Dominica--attributing it to the legacy of slavery. By the author of Lucy.
Categories:
["Fiction""Women""Weibliche Schwarze""Belletristische Darstellung""Widowers""Neighborhood""Neighborhoods""Storms""Houses""Loss (Psychology)""Maintenance and repair""Carpenters""Psychological fiction""Friendship""Dwellings""Fictionbiographical""Caribbean areafiction""Ficci\u00f3n""Mujeres""Dominican republicfiction""Fictionfantasygeneral""New York Times reviewed""Fictiongeneral""romance"]