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Chronicling the events that took place in Grenada from 1951--when workers revolted against the white owners of the sugar and cocoa estates--to the U.S. invasion in 1983, this revised and expanded edition follows headstrong Angel and her mother Doodsie as they experience the deposition of the old, corrupted leadership with conflicted emotions. As their community struggles for independence, the political conflicts in Grenada tear long-term relationships apart, provoke fratricidal killings, and allow an outrageous breach of sovereignty. Seamlessly moving between these serious events and the warmth and tensions of family life, this celebrated novel offers an informed account of the revolution and a richly developed vernacular.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Merle Collins is a professor of comparative literature and English at the University of Maryland. She is the author of
Angel,
Because the Dawn Breaks,
The Colour of Forgetting,
Rain Darling, and
Rotten Pomerack. Her critical works have appeared in
From My Guy to Sci-Fi: Genre and Women's Writing in the Postmodern World and
Slavery and Abolition. Her literary work has appeared in
Penguin Modern Poets Volume 8 and
The Oxford Book of Caribbean Short Stories.