Tag Archives: Edwidge Danticat

Sélavi, That is Life: A Haitian Story of Hope by Youme, with an essay by Edwidge Danticat

The first thing you need to know is that this story is real. And although it was first published eight years ago – and six years before the tragic January 12, 2010 Haitian earthquake – Sélavi is an even more urgent call for help for Haiti’s children.

A young boy arrives in “the capital city of his country” with nothing, not even a name: “Not long ago and not far away, people with guns could take a family, burn a house and disappear, leaving a small child alone in the world.” He’s somehow managed to survive, but the small child is “too tired to keep going.” He’s befriended by a young boy his own age, TiFrè, who encourages the child to name himself; he becomes “Sélavi,” Kreyòl (Haiti’s primary language) for ‘that’s life.’

Sélavi follows his new friend to a large banyan tree that is home to many children who gather every evening to share what they have managed to earn, scavenge, or beg. “‘We each bring back what we get during the day, and we all end up with more,’” TiFrè explains. Sélavi soon feels like he’s found a family: Jenti, whose whole family drowned on an old ferry boat, Touissant whose house was just too full of hungry people, Espri and Yvette whose family disappeared, and TiFrè who lost his mother and brother to illness.

The children live together, surviving day-to-day, until soldiers brutally drive them away from their banyan home. Sélavi finds shelter inside a church, where the congregation commits to build a home for the street children. “‘Alone … we may be a single drop of water, but together we can be a mighty river. We must help each other to become strong,’” the church leader encourages. The home becomes a reality – named the Lafanmi Sélavi – but the children’s sanctuary does not last long, as the military burns down Sélavi’s new home. In spite of the shocking tragedy, Lafanmi Sélavi is quickly rebuilt, and the children’s voices grow ever stronger, thanks to a new radio station built just for the children!

In a resonating essay at book’s end by mega-award-winning author Edwidge Danticat whose name is virtually synonymous with Haiti, Danticat explains her birthcountry’s troubled history, its long connections with the U.S., as well as the story of Lafanmi Sélavi, an orphanage opened in 1986 by Jean-Bertrand Aristide (!) who was then a Catholic priest, who would later become Haiti’s first democratically-elected president. Regardless of what readers may think of his controversial political career, Aristide is deservedly credited with not only building (and rebuilding) Lafanmi Sélavi, but founding the radio station Radyo Timoun for Lafanmi Sélavi’s many children.

Those children’s youthful resilience, the hopeful inspiration captured here by artist/writer Youme is based on her own travels to Haiti, interviewing and recording the lives of the real-life Sélavi, TiFrè, and their many Lanfanmi-siblings. ”‘Tell them we are here, that we are no less than wealthy children, and that there should be a place for everyone at the table,’” the children ask Youme to share with her readers.

Post-earthquake, these children’s words are louder than ever … stop, listen, and join the river of change.

Readers: Children

Published: 2004

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Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Nonfiction, Caribbean

Eight Days: A Story of Haiti by Edwidge Danticat, illustrated by Alix Delinois

This has been one tragic week: the deadly Oaxaca, Mexico mudslide, the two Rutgers freshmen whose abusively invasive actions led to the suicide of a third first-year student, the deaths of iconic actor Tony Curtis and director Arthur Penn … and goodness, I feel like I’m just getting started …

So on this last day of September, I thought it was time to post a happy ending story of survival against all odds.

No one writes as memorably of Haiti than the award-winning Edwidge Danticat. And goodness can she render some of the most horrific, haunting inhumanity into remarkably flowing, unforgettable prose. Her latest title is dedicated to “the children of Haiti,” the children who survived the January 2010 Port-au-Prince earthquake, who “in spite of everything, … still dream … laugh … live … [and] love.”

Eight days after the earth shook, a young boy is pulled from the rubble that was once his house. “I was brave,” he states simply when asked if he was afraid, sad, if he cried. And he tells the wondrous story of how he survived through his imagination: “In my mind, I played.”

Trapped and frightened, the little boy created delightful adventures each day, imagining that he was playing with his best friend Oscar, flying kites, gathering “the biggest game of marbles ever played … in the entire world!” He plays ‘hide-and-seek,’ teases his sister, visits his father’s barbershop, sings “the best solo ever sung,” gives his mother mango-kisses, even remembers to recite his lessons. And when he is finally pulled to freedom, he “hugged [his family] so tight I thought I would never let go.”

Captured with hopeful vibrancy by Haitian American artist Alix Delinois, the power of imaginative play, of hours spent in childhood wonder, the final relief of grace-filled reunion, emanate from the pages. In spite of all the tragedy around us, how lovely (and necessary) to be reminded of happy endings and miraculous re-beginnings.

Today … and every day … hold your children tight, teach them to be kind and gentle, read them stories like this one and keep fueling their joyful spirits.

Click here to see Edwidge Danticat’s other titles on BookDragon.

Readers: Children

Published: 2010

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Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, African American, Carribbean American

Brother, I’m Dying by Edwidge Danticat

brother-im-dying1Something magical happens when prize-winning novelist Edwidge Danticat strings words together. From the most trivial details to breathtaking moments of enormous gravity, Danticat uses words as charms that gently beckon readers into her world and make them sigh, smile, laugh, and weep.

Crafted in Danticat’s signature precise, unflinching prose, her latest, Brother, I’m Dying, is yet another revelation. In just three words, the title encompasses the memoir’s essence: It’s about family and it’s about death. Within those parameters, Danticat unfolds her heart-wrenching, intimate and true stories.

In July 2004, just as she accepts that her father will succumb to pulmonary fibrosis, Danticat learns that she is carrying her first child: “My father was dying and I was pregnant. Both struck me as impossibly unreal.” During the following months, Danticat and her family will endure and somehow begin to heal some of the most devastating experiences of their scattered lives.  …[click here for more]

Review: San Francisco Chronicle, October 10, 2007

Readers: Adult

Published: 2007

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, African American

We Are All Suspects Now: Untold Stories from Immigrant Communities after 9/11 by Tram Nguyen, foreword by Edwidge Danticat

We Are All Suspects NowAward-winning Haitian American writer Danticat opens this sobering title with the death of her 81-year-old uncle who fled his native land when his life was threatened, only to die shackled to a hospital ward in Miami, inexplicably treated as a hardened criminal. Nguyen, executive editor of Colorlines magazine, bears witness to the innocent who have suffered without cause, who have suffered in anonymity – all in the name of this so-called war on terror.

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, September 29, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2005

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, Nonethnic-specific, Vietnamese American

The Dew Breaker by Edwidge Danticat + Author Interview

dew-breakerHorror, Hope & Redemption: A Talk with Edwidge Danticat About Her Latest Novel, The Dew Breaker

When I mention to a dear friend in England, who happens to be an excellent fiction writer herself, that I’m preparing to interview Edwidge Danticat, her reply is swift: “I can’t believe you’re interviewing Edwidge Danticat. She is an amazing writer, writes all those things we Europeans are trained to feel they shouldn’t name.” Indeed, Danticat’s books have covered some of the worst atrocities humans perpetrate on one another, while her prowess as a writer allows her to reveal her stories in nuanced, elegant prose. In spite of her youth – she’s just in her mid-30s – the seemingly effortless grace of Danticat’s work belies a wisdom gained only in experiences that cannot possibly be measured by age. 

Her latest book is no different. Published last spring to unabashedly glowing reviews, The Dew Breaker is ultimately a novel of hope and redemption, but the details throughout are horrific and haunting. The title refers to a torturer employed by the brutal government of François “Papa Doc” Duvalier to kidnap, maim, and kill people, so named because the dew breaker usually arrived “before dawn, as the dew was settling on the leaves.” 

Like her latest novel, Danticat’s other fiction, Breath,  Eyes,  Memory; Krik?  Krak!; The Farming  of Bones; and young adult novel Behind the Mountains, is a powerful mixture of her native Haiti’s turbulent collective history and her own transforming journey to America. Born in a time of political and economic instability, Danticat was raised by her aunt and uncle in Haiti until her parents, who had previously emigrated to the United States, sent for her when she was 12. …[click here for more]

Author interview: The Bloomsbury Review, September/October 2004

Readers: Adult

Published: 2004

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, African American, Carribbean American

Series Profile: First Person Fiction

first-person-fiction

Behind the Mountains by Edwidge Danticat
Flight to Freedom by Ana Veciana-Suarez
Finding My Hat by John Son
The Stone Goddess by Minfong Ho

With the exception of the Native Americans—and some may still argue that they walked over the Bering Straits from Asia – every so-called American is actually an immigrant. Even as the term “American” may still connote a fair-skinned Caucasian who is blond and blue-eyed, in reality Americans come in every color, from every ethnicity and every culture.

In the publishing industry, Scholastic has been a major leader in depicting the lives of every type of young American with three highly popular series – Dear America, My America, and My Name Is America – all of which capture the American experience from colonial to modern times, including numerous historical immigrant experiences as well. The latest Scholastic series, First Person Fiction, focuses on the more recent immigrant experience. “Today’s immigrants have different expectations from the people who came a hundred or more years ago,” says Amy Griffin, senior editor of Orchard Books, the Scholastic imprint responsible for the series. “Before, it was about assimilation. Today, it’s about maintaining a balance between the culture of the world left behind, and marrying that home culture with the new culture that is America.” 

First Person Fiction debuted in October 2002 with two titles – Behind the Mountains by Edwidge Danticat and Flight to Freedom by Ana Veciana-Suarez – then added two titles, Finding My Hat by John Son and The Stone Goddess by Minfong Ho, in October 2003. The first two are scheduled for paperback release in February 2004. “We wanted to find writers who themselves had immigrated to America,” explains Griffin. “Because they would understand the struggles and get the voice right, readers could trust these writers’ knowledge of the immigrant experience.” …[click here for more]

Series profile: The Bloomsbury Review, January/February 2004

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2003

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, African American, Cambodian American, Carribbean American, Korean American, Latino/a