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Natives of My Person - by George Lamming Paperback
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Highlights
- George Lamming--one of the Caribbean's most powerful literary voices--reimagines the age of European exploration to expose the deep scars of conquest in this novel, which Ngũgĩ wa Thiong''o, perennial contender for the Nobel Prize, calls "one of the great political novels in modern 'colonial' literature.
- About the Author: GOERGE LAMMING (1927-2022) was a novelist, essayist, and poet.
- 496 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
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About the Book
"A nameless Commander sets sail under imperial orders--somewhere between the 16th and 18th century--to locate the fabled island of San Cristobal, a place shrouded in myth and promise. But this is no ordinary voyage. As the expedition unfolds, it becomes a mirror of the imperial mind--ambitious, fractured, haunted by its own contradictions. With poetic intensity and philosophical depth, Natives of My Person journeys far beyond the seas it charts. Through shifting perspectives and a richly layered narrative, Lamming unearths the personal and political dimensions of empire--its delusions, its violence, and the haunting legacy it leaves behind"-- Provided by publisher.
Book Synopsis
George Lamming--one of the Caribbean's most powerful literary voices--reimagines the age of European exploration to expose the deep scars of conquest in this novel, which Ngũgĩ wa Thiong''o, perennial contender for the Nobel Prize, calls "one of the great political novels in modern 'colonial' literature."
A nameless Commandant sets sail under imperial orders--somewhere between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries--to locate the fabled island of San Cristobal, a place shrouded in myth and promise. But this is no ordinary voyage. As the expedition unfolds, it becomes a mirror of the imperial mind--ambitious, fractured, haunted by its own contradictions.
With poetic intensity and philosophical depth, Natives of My Person journeys far beyond the seas it charts. Through shifting perspectives and a richly layered narrative, Lamming unearths the personal and political dimensions of empire--its delusions, its violence, and the haunting legacy it leaves behind.
"George Lamming is not so much a novelist as a chronicler of secret journeys to the innermost regions of the West Indian psyche. . . an uninhibited journey to the heart of the colonizer." --The New York Times
About the Author
GOERGE LAMMING (1927-2022) was a novelist, essayist, and poet. Lamming was born and raised in Barbados but worked as a teacher in Trinidad before settling in the UK. His teaching career included posts as distinguished visiting professor at Duke University and visiting professor at Brown University. Among his books are In the Castle of My Skin (1953), The Emigrants (1954), Of Age and Innocence (1958), The Pleasures of Exile (1960), and Natives of My Person (1972). Lamming's first novel, In the Castle of My Skin, won the Somerset Maugham Award; in 1954, Lamming was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2008, Lamming was honored with an Order of the Caribbean Community (OCC) to acknowledge "fifty-five years of extraordinary engagement with the responsibility of illuminating Caribbean identities, healing the wounds of erasure and fragmentation."