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Oonya Kempadoo

Auteur de Buxton Spice

7+ oeuvres 211 utilisateurs 8 critiques 1 Favoris

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Œuvres de Oonya Kempadoo

Buxton Spice (1998) 121 exemplaires
Tide Running (2001) 43 exemplaires
All Decent Animals: A Novel (2013) 42 exemplaires
Naniki (2024) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Rotten English: A Literary Anthology (2007) — Contributeur — 75 exemplaires
Trinidad Noir (2008) — Contributeur — 58 exemplaires
Coming of Age Around the World: A Multicultural Anthology (2007) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires

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Sassy, tart, frightening. Superbly written. I heard the voices, felt the heat, ached from the tragedy born out of the struggles of poverty, race, faith....all those same old stories, played out starkly in one fleeting time.
 
Signalé
Martialia | 3 autres critiques | Sep 28, 2022 |
A fairly evocative look back to the author's childhood in Guyana. The writing is poetic, descriptive, as she recalls the place, the people and the political climate for a girl on the brink of adulthood. And watching over all the events stands the Buxton Spice mango tree in the garden.Not massively memorable but quite well written.
 
Signalé
starbox | 3 autres critiques | Jun 28, 2019 |
I picked this up after going through lists of authors for the Caribbean theme in Reading Globally for the first quarter of this year. This had the benefit of being available at my library. After publishing her first two novels relatively close together (1998 and 2001) there was a twelve year gap between the second and this, her third novel. Kempadoo was born in England to Guyanese parents and brought up in Guyana from the age of five onward. While Guyana is part of the South American continent it is considered part of the Caribbean both linguistically and culturally, and is part of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).

The book centers around a Ata, an artist who has returned to Trinidad to live (she is not from Trinidad but has considers 'Caribbean' to be her nationality). She has worked with Carnival costume designers and is now starting an office job. The book focuses most on her, I'd say, but the always-third-person narration floats around between her and her group of friends representing a wide variety of people, backgrounds, classes and views. The book takes place mostly just before, during, and after Carnival. Some reviewers have said it felt like she tried to cram every aspect of Trinidad into a relatively short book, but I felt like that worked because of being set around Carnival.

As the focus of the narration changes so does the language, going from no Creole slang/dialect to using a fair bit (most of it totally understandable to the outsider). Having the mix change really works, though had me wishing over and over there were an audio edition (it would be an excellent audiobook, with a good reader, of course). I'm really curious about the simultaneous usage of youall and allyou and why one is chosen over another at any given time since externally they mean the same thing (for the corollaries in my part of Appalachia and the upper Ohio River valley I'd be tempted to say that 'allyou' is more personal and 'youall' more general).

The biggest plot part of the book is one of Ata's group, an architect and gay man, Fraser, having a serious medical collapse which turns out to be due to AIDS, which has already seriously damaged his kidneys. The rush to help him, but also judgement of his choices and difficult decisions, is a key part of the book, with Ata seemingly taking on more of his care than anyone else. His sickness sets some cracks running through their group.

It is a busy book, a full book, and a swift book. Towards the end there are some things that I don't really get, one of which seemed totally unnecessary and goes unresolved, but otherwise I think it's a pretty solid novel with beautiful writing. The hills are almost a character themselves, which, being a West Virginia girl, I appreciated and related to. The top four or five reviews on Goodreads give you a good sense of it, and what potential problems are, I think.
… (plus d'informations)
½
2 voter
Signalé
mabith | 1 autre critique | Jan 31, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Aussi par
3
Membres
211
Popularité
#105,256
Évaluation
½ 3.3
Critiques
8
ISBN
22
Langues
3
Favoris
1

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