
Flickering Shadows
A novel by Kwadwo Agymah Kamau
September 1, 1996 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠304 pages ⢠978-1-56689-049-6
Political corruption, lust, and betrayal poison a Caribbean island paradise.
Deeply engrossing and beautifully written, this debut novel marks the stunning arrival of a major new talent. Set on a fictional Caribbean island, Flickering Shadows is the story of the colorful and compelling inhabitants of a small ex-colony, a village called the Hill. Cephusâs grandfatherâarguably one of the most intriguing narrators to appear in fiction in some timeâdraws the reader into the lives and vivid dramas of the whole community. Cephus, Doreen, Boysie, Inez, young Kwame, the ghost, Dolphus, and an array of vibrantly depicted characters form a rich and hypnotic tale of love and betrayal, selflessness and honor, lust and dignity. Played out against a backdrop of political chicanery and religious corruption, this entrancing novel captivates from its first sentence to its breathtaking and unforgettable conclusion.
Reviews
Â
âPeople have been asking for some time now: where are the Bajan griot voices to succeed George Lamming, Paule Marshall, Austin Clark? Well, look in vain no further. Here, fresh & young in the spirit-fields of that nearest-to-Africa Caribbean island, is my namesake Kwadwi Agymah Kamauâs first novel, Flickering Shadows, continuing the great coral/choral-calling tradition of Barbados.â âKamau Brathwaite, Savacou Publications
âDazzling in its playful, poetic language; haunting in its authentic evocation of aplace; and totally original in narrative voice, Flickering Shadows is a gem, a work of pure enchantment. To read it is to fall under an island spell. Tragic yet uplifting, this is fiction at its best.â âLee Smith, author of Saving Grace and The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed
âKamau is a loving native son/literary ju ju man whose language is sheer poetry nothing less! His people are unforgettable, their pride and strength a monument, brought forth, made sacred on the pages of this jewel of a book.â âMarita Golden, author of And Do Remember Me and Saving Our Sons
âIn this, his first novel, Agymah Kamau has taken life in a hard-scrabble little West Indian village and, through the power of his vision and his lean poetic prose, made it speak for the oppressed the world over. An impressive debut.â âPaul Marshall, author of Daughters and The Chosen Place, The Timeless People
âHere is a compelling new voice from the Caribbean. . . . Reading Kwadwo Agymah Kamauâs extraordinary first novel calls to mind Vic Reidâs masterful capturing of the cadences and idioms of Caribbean speech; Erna Brodberâs mesmerizing poetic lyricism; Wilson Harrisâs provocative magical realism; Sam Selvonâs seductive humor; and George Lammingâs political imperatives.â âDaryl Cumber Dance, editor, Folklore from Contemporary Jamaicans & Fifty Caribbean Writers
A novel by Kwadwo Agymah Kamau
September 1, 1996 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠304 pages ⢠978-1-56689-049-6
Political corruption, lust, and betrayal poison a Caribbean island paradise.
Deeply engrossing and beautifully written, this debut novel marks the stunning arrival of a major new talent. Set on a fictional Caribbean island, Flickering Shadows is the story of the colorful and compelling inhabitants of a small ex-colony, a village called the Hill. Cephusâs grandfatherâarguably one of the most intriguing narrators to appear in fiction in some timeâdraws the reader into the lives and vivid dramas of the whole community. Cephus, Doreen, Boysie, Inez, young Kwame, the ghost, Dolphus, and an array of vibrantly depicted characters form a rich and hypnotic tale of love and betrayal, selflessness and honor, lust and dignity. Played out against a backdrop of political chicanery and religious corruption, this entrancing novel captivates from its first sentence to its breathtaking and unforgettable conclusion.
Reviews
Â
âPeople have been asking for some time now: where are the Bajan griot voices to succeed George Lamming, Paule Marshall, Austin Clark? Well, look in vain no further. Here, fresh & young in the spirit-fields of that nearest-to-Africa Caribbean island, is my namesake Kwadwi Agymah Kamauâs first novel, Flickering Shadows, continuing the great coral/choral-calling tradition of Barbados.â âKamau Brathwaite, Savacou Publications
âDazzling in its playful, poetic language; haunting in its authentic evocation of aplace; and totally original in narrative voice, Flickering Shadows is a gem, a work of pure enchantment. To read it is to fall under an island spell. Tragic yet uplifting, this is fiction at its best.â âLee Smith, author of Saving Grace and The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed
âKamau is a loving native son/literary ju ju man whose language is sheer poetry nothing less! His people are unforgettable, their pride and strength a monument, brought forth, made sacred on the pages of this jewel of a book.â âMarita Golden, author of And Do Remember Me and Saving Our Sons
âIn this, his first novel, Agymah Kamau has taken life in a hard-scrabble little West Indian village and, through the power of his vision and his lean poetic prose, made it speak for the oppressed the world over. An impressive debut.â âPaul Marshall, author of Daughters and The Chosen Place, The Timeless People
âHere is a compelling new voice from the Caribbean. . . . Reading Kwadwo Agymah Kamauâs extraordinary first novel calls to mind Vic Reidâs masterful capturing of the cadences and idioms of Caribbean speech; Erna Brodberâs mesmerizing poetic lyricism; Wilson Harrisâs provocative magical realism; Sam Selvonâs seductive humor; and George Lammingâs political imperatives.â âDaryl Cumber Dance, editor, Folklore from Contemporary Jamaicans & Fifty Caribbean Writers
Original: $21.95
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$6.58Description
A novel by Kwadwo Agymah Kamau
September 1, 1996 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠304 pages ⢠978-1-56689-049-6
Political corruption, lust, and betrayal poison a Caribbean island paradise.
Deeply engrossing and beautifully written, this debut novel marks the stunning arrival of a major new talent. Set on a fictional Caribbean island, Flickering Shadows is the story of the colorful and compelling inhabitants of a small ex-colony, a village called the Hill. Cephusâs grandfatherâarguably one of the most intriguing narrators to appear in fiction in some timeâdraws the reader into the lives and vivid dramas of the whole community. Cephus, Doreen, Boysie, Inez, young Kwame, the ghost, Dolphus, and an array of vibrantly depicted characters form a rich and hypnotic tale of love and betrayal, selflessness and honor, lust and dignity. Played out against a backdrop of political chicanery and religious corruption, this entrancing novel captivates from its first sentence to its breathtaking and unforgettable conclusion.
Reviews
Â
âPeople have been asking for some time now: where are the Bajan griot voices to succeed George Lamming, Paule Marshall, Austin Clark? Well, look in vain no further. Here, fresh & young in the spirit-fields of that nearest-to-Africa Caribbean island, is my namesake Kwadwi Agymah Kamauâs first novel, Flickering Shadows, continuing the great coral/choral-calling tradition of Barbados.â âKamau Brathwaite, Savacou Publications
âDazzling in its playful, poetic language; haunting in its authentic evocation of aplace; and totally original in narrative voice, Flickering Shadows is a gem, a work of pure enchantment. To read it is to fall under an island spell. Tragic yet uplifting, this is fiction at its best.â âLee Smith, author of Saving Grace and The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed
âKamau is a loving native son/literary ju ju man whose language is sheer poetry nothing less! His people are unforgettable, their pride and strength a monument, brought forth, made sacred on the pages of this jewel of a book.â âMarita Golden, author of And Do Remember Me and Saving Our Sons
âIn this, his first novel, Agymah Kamau has taken life in a hard-scrabble little West Indian village and, through the power of his vision and his lean poetic prose, made it speak for the oppressed the world over. An impressive debut.â âPaul Marshall, author of Daughters and The Chosen Place, The Timeless People
âHere is a compelling new voice from the Caribbean. . . . Reading Kwadwo Agymah Kamauâs extraordinary first novel calls to mind Vic Reidâs masterful capturing of the cadences and idioms of Caribbean speech; Erna Brodberâs mesmerizing poetic lyricism; Wilson Harrisâs provocative magical realism; Sam Selvonâs seductive humor; and George Lammingâs political imperatives.â âDaryl Cumber Dance, editor, Folklore from Contemporary Jamaicans & Fifty Caribbean Writers










