Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson- 1998- 256 pages
Last month I read The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson. I was very much shocked by the depth of this work dealing deeply with the consequences of slavery through several centuries.
From my post on The Salt Roads
“So far this year I have been stunned by the depth and Beauty of two novels by writers hithertonow unread by me. The first was The Master and Margarita by Michail Bulgakov. The Salt Roads is my second such work. By Nalo Hopkinson is just amazing beyond my powers to describe how I feel about it.
The Salt Roads focus on the lives of three women of color, living out the consequences of enslavement by Europeans.”
Brown Girl in the Ring, Nalo Hopkinson’s first novel, lived up to my very high expectations. Set in a dystopian future Toronto where the central city has been largely abandoned by white residents escaping to the outer fringes of the huge city. Inner City Toronto is a place of hopelessness, extreme
poverty and a constant threat of violence. The central characters In Brown Girl in The Ring are the descendants of African slaves of Caribbean background. All social services have broken down. There is a big demand for human organs. Rudy Sheldon with a gang of brutal thugs rules the streets.
As the plot begins, we are twelve years past the riots that transformed the inner City, Rudy has been given a Commission to find a human heart for the premier of Ontario.
At this point we are introduced to Ti-Jeanne, grandmother is traditional Caribbean healer. Ti-Jeanne, a single mother in her struggle to stay of streets has moved in with her grandmother. The baby’s father, her one time boyfriend, is a drug addict who survived by working for Rudy. He has been assigned to find a healthy Young person with a matching blood type and take out their heart. He has been told if he fails in this Mission he Will be eaten by a weird creature controlled by Rudy. He finds a Young man but cannot bring himself to commit cold blooded murder. He goes Ti-Jeanne’s grandmother for a protective spell. At first the grandmother wants nothing to do with him. Then she gives in and decides to help him.
The plot gets complicated now, deeply involved with Caribbean folklore and black magic. There are scenes of disturbing graphic cruelty. One scene where a woman Rudy turned into a zombie is skinned alive was very vivid.
The dialogue is in a version of Afro-Carib English. There are heavy elements of magic realism. Horrible things happen to innocent and not so innocent people.
I greatly enjoyed this book. To those new to Nalo Hopkinson as I was until last month, start with The Salt Reads.
There is bio data on her on my prior posts. I hope to read all of her novels.
This one, her debut, is often suggested as a great place to start with her, but I agree that, after you've read her more complex work, like The Salt Roads which you've obviously enjoyed a lot, this one reads like...well...a first novel (which it is)! But this one actually was my introduction to her work; at that time, when it was new, this story stood out in the landscape of SF/FAN for so many reasons, and that was enough to pique my interest at the time.
ReplyDeleteBuried in Print. Beung set in Toronto must have added a lot for you. I think many may decide to read just one if her works and fir sure it should be The Salt Roads
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