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Thirty-three essays and poems describing the Hatian Émigré experience






February 2001 | Anthology/Caribbean
$15 Paperback
ISBN: 1-56947218-1
Dram. rights: Watkins/Loomis Agency
All other rights: Soho Press



“This rich collection of writings will appeal to the growing number of Haitian-Americans and others interested in the question of the émigré's sense of identity.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A potent and piercing collection.... Eloquent.... [Haiti] must be better understood, and Danticat's revelatory anthology is a giant step in that direction.”
—Booklist




In five sections — Childhood, Migration, Half / First Generation, Return, and Future — the contributors to this anthology write powerfully, often hauntingly, of their lives in Haiti and the United States. Jean–Robert Cadet's description of his Haitian childhood as a restavek — a child slave — in Port–au–Prince contrasts with Dany Laferiere's account of a ten–year–old boy and his beloved grandmother in Petit–Goave. We read of Marie Helene Laforest's realization that while she was white in Haiti, in the United States she is black. Patricia Benoit tells us of a Haitian woman regugee in a detention center who has a simple need, a red dress — dignity. The reaction of a man when he marries the woman he loves is the theme of Gary Pierre–Pierre's "The White Wife"; the feeling of alienation is explored in "Made Outside" by Francie Latour. The frustration of trying to help those who remained and of the do–gooders who do more for themselves than the Haitians is described in Babette Wainwright's "Do Somthing for Your Soul, Go to Haiti."

The variations and permutations of the divided self of the Haitian emigrant are poignantly conveyed in this unique anthology.






EDWIDGE DANTICAT is the author of Breath, Eyes, Memory; Krik? Krak!; The Farming of Bones; and The Dew Breaker.

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