A lyrical coming-of-age story and an essential retelling of the colonial history of Jamaica.

Originally published in 1984, this critically acclaimed novel is the story of Clare Savage, a light-skinned, middle-class twelve-year-old growing up in Jamaica in the 1950s.

As Clare tries to find her own identity and place in her culture, she carries the burden of her mixed heritage. There are the Maroons, who used the conch shell--the abeng--to pass messages as they fought against their English enslavers. And there is her white great-great-grandfather, Judge Savage, who committed a terrible act of violence on the eve of emancipation.

In Clare's struggle to reconcile the conflicting legacies of her own personal lineage, esteemed Caribbean author Michelle Cliff dramatically confronts the cultural and psychological brutality inflicted upon the island and its people by colonialism.

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Published May 1, 2008

176 pages

Average rating: 8

1 RATING

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Community Reviews

whothehelliskaitlin
Dec 23, 2024
8/10 stars
Read this a few months ago. I loved the way Cliff flawlessly switches between writing a historical account of what happened to the Black population in Jamaica and her storyline/characters. This is not simply fiction that has a historical setting but is truly fiction that is teaching history. It is incredibly blunt and extremely passionate writing.

I only take away a star because I felt that the ending was lacking and unfulfilling. I know there is a second novel that carries on the story but it is set many years in the future so this novel's ending to me felt very random and unabrupt.

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