Flickering Shadows: A Novel
Product Description
Cudgoe has died several times in the past 300 years. Now, as a ghost he is watching over the Hill, a fictionalized island nation in the Caribbean that has just won its independence. Then bauxite deposits are learned under the Hill and the government evicts the residents to start strip mining. Cudgoe and his “ghostly” friends help the inhabitants by interfering with the plans of a corrupt government.Amazon.com Review
In his first novel, Kwadwo Agymah Kam… More >>
Tagged with: Flickering • Novel • Shadows
Filed under: Beach
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Having an understanding for Caribbean dialects would help when reading this book. The tale is charged with political and religious dialogue, which I found fascinating. But I don’t reckon this book is for everyone. I believe that the thought of duppies (spirits) having hand in what goes on in everyday life is unsettling to most people. I found that I can identify with the book easily than other friends that have attempted to read it. Its worth a try but I’d suggest getting it at the public library first. If you can know it then, I say add it to your collection
Rating: 3 / 5
I have no familiarity with the Caribbean or its culture. I bought the book by chance from a mark-down table a year or two ago. Having just finished reading it, I wish I could give it more than five stars. I found it entertaining, amusing, thought provoking, and poetic. Probably one of the best pieces of fiction I’ve read in years. I’m hoping Kamau has written more that I can read. What a talent! What an enjoyable reading experience! And yes, profoundly original in its concept. Wow.
Rating: 5 / 5
This novel was a serendipitous gem! Who would have thought that an unknown author whose book was hidden on the sale shelf would bring so much enjoyment to those of us who are C’bean and proud of it? The author intertwined the spiritual realm with the realities of a small Caribbean nation. The results were hilarious (most of the time)and thought provoking (all of the time). The men and women that inhabit this novel are family to me. They live the life my grandparents experienced and through all the hardships maintained a dignity and like of life that was a joy to read. If you delight in Sam Selvon and other classic C’bean writers, dig into this book. After I reluctantly finished this book, I immediately lent it to my Bajan friend, who related to it even more than I did. I hope that I am lucky enough to find somethng else by this wonderful author.
Rating: 5 / 5
Ten pages into this book the narrator dies. From then on he’s a duppy alternately watching and interfering with the actions of mortals. Plenty of ghosts join in the fun but it is largely the Narrator’s perspective. Rather than being an omniscent detached narrator, this is a first person tale told from someone who’d like to join in on the lives of others but can’t. He’s bitter, cantankerous, judgemental and altogether foolish for a dead guy. He even influences a choice and then later regrets it as nepotism. He’s hilarious.
And he’s gotta be amusing, because the main plotline is depressing. On a small Carribean island in the worst spot of land, a missionary moves in with an agenda to buy up the land and exploit the resources. The two main characters try to oppose him but they spend most of their time betraying each other as well as getting thrown in jail by the corrupt officials. There’s also precognizance that ultimately they’ll both be killed as well as their children. Around them are assassinations, brutality and politicians uniformly corrupt and/or stupid.
Still, as the ghost telling the tale doesn’t seem to mind, you are went along the plotline without letting yourself get too bogged down in the horrors. Akin to Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabelle Allende this is in many ways a much more robust version of the Magical Realism genre.
Rating: 5 / 5