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Jamaica Kincaid : Annie John (Plume)
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Author: Jamaica Kincaid
Title: Annie John (Plume)
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 1
Date: 1986-05-01
ISBN: 0452260167
Publisher: Plume
Weight: 0.25 pounds
Size: 1.0 x 7.0 x 5.0 inches
Edition: 0
Amazon prices:
$1.85used
$85.52new
Previous givers: 3 John (USA: NY), Linda H (USA: NY), susanbooks (USA: MA)
Previous moochers: 3 Suedo (United Kingdom), Mary (USA: TX), Audrey (USA: NV)
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Description: Product Description
The island of Antigua is a magical place: growing up there should be a sojourn in paradise for young Annie John. But, as in the basket of green figs carried on her mother's head, there is a snake hidden somewhere within. Annie John begins by adoring her beautiful mother, but inexplicably she comes to hate her. Adolescence takes this brilliant, headstrong girl into open rebellions and secret discoveries - and finally to a crisis of emotions that wrenches her away from her island home.


Amazon.com Review
Jamaica Kincaid beautifully delineates hatred and fear, because she knows they are often a step away from love and obsession. At the start of Annie John, her 10-year-old heroine is engulfed in family happiness and safety. Though Annie loves her father, she is all eyes for her mother. When she is almost 12, however, the idyll ends and she falls into deep disfavor. This inexplicable loss mars both lives, as each grows adept at public falsity and silent betrayal. The pattern is set, and extended: "And now I started a new series of betrayals of people and things I would have sworn only minutes before to die for." In front of Annie's father and the world, "We were politeness and kindness and love and laughter." Alone they are linked in loathing. Annie tries to imagine herself as someone in a book--an orphan or a girl with a wicked stepmother. The trouble is, she finds, those characters' lives always end happily. Luckily for us, though not perhaps for her alter ego, Kincaid is too truthful a writer to provide such a finale.

Reviews: John (USA: NY) (2010/02/13):
I used to love Jamaica Kincaid's pieces in her early days at the New Yorker, so I tried this. The writing holds up but the story did not grab me the way her 'about town' reporting did.



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