The stories in this collection range wide: across different ethnic communities; across rural and urban settings; across the moneyed elite (and illicit new wealth) and the poor scrabbling for survival; locals and expatriates; the certainties of rational knowledge and the mysteries of the unseen and the uncanny. Different locations in Trinidad are brought to the reader through a precise and sensuous mapping of the country’s fauna and flora.
“Sharon Millar has written a collection where ‘hard back woman give talk’ and ‘big man stand up and cry.’ After reading it you may do the same. Millar has rooted herself into a Caribbean literature where language crackles and no ethnicity, gender, economic status or race is off limits. The collection is one of handsome boys with bullets in their backs and of high-class women with babies in their bellies. There is a sweet and bitter magic here that Millar performs via the bodies of the characters. Women have turmeric eyes, men are too beautiful to die, children dance the cocoa and unborn babies are made born as baby sharks. This book made me catch my breath. It made me shake my head and sigh. The characters barb and the language sings.”
Tiphanie Yanique