Stephen Kimber (1)Besprekingen
Auteur van Sailors, Slackers and Blind Pigs: Halifax at War
Voor andere auteurs genaamd Stephen Kimber, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.
11+ Werken 109 Leden 2 Besprekingen
Besprekingen
The Sweetness in the Lime door Stephen Kimber
Gemarkeerd
icolford | Oct 27, 2020 | Reparations by Stephen Kimber tells the fictional story of what happened to the residents of Africville, the black community on the edge of Halifax, after the city of Halifax destroyed their home in the 1960’s. At the heart of the story is a friendship between Raymond Carter, a resident of Africville, and Ward Justice, a fisherman’s son. Ward’s father, Desmond, initiated a strike against his employers because of the unfair working conditions. After many months on the picket line, the employers agreed to hire everyone back, everyone except Desmond Justice. Desmond and his family moved to Halifax in the middle of the school year. Ward and Ray met on Ward’s first day at his new school when a group of black boys attacked Ward and Ray stopped the fight. After that day, Ward and Ray were inseparable although Desmond did not want Ward to hang around with “coloureds”. Ward enjoyed going to Ray’s home in Africville which reminded him of the fishing village where he was born. The friendship did not survive the high school years however. Ward was placed in C-3 in tenth grade. There were no black students in C-3 whereas half the students in C-17, Ray’s homeroom, were black. The students in C-3 were expected to go to university after high school. When Ray went to the guidance counsellor in Grade 11 to enquire about getting into university he was informed that he was in the general stream and he had no chance of being admitted to university.
Fast forward to the year 2002. Uhuru Kwacha, the former Raymond Carter, is a lawyer standing in the courtroom of Ward Justice. His client is a bookkeeper for the City of Halifax charged with embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars. Uhuru tells Mr. Justice Justice that his client is pleading not guilty and defends his actions because he used the money to benefit former residents of Africville and their descendents. Uhuru knows he is on very shaky legal ground and, in fact, he is really making up his argument on the fly. The judge is very short with him and denies bail for his client. Two years later when the trial starts Uhuru is leading a defense team that includes a black female law professor and a white former law professor with considerable courtroom experience. Ward Justice is the trial judge. The shared history, as well as their separate experiences in the intervening years, of the two men underpins the court case.
Reparations is a masterful account of the experiences of blacks in modern Nova Scotia. Kimber shows how pervasive racism was in the 1960’s and beyond but he also shows that success was possible for some in the black community. The black characters are believable because they have failings as well as virtues.
As for the white characters in the book, they seem more universally venal. The head of the fishing company is particularly malevolent and his buddy who mentors Ward through law school and into politics is a nasty piece of work too. Ward is not evil per se but he is easily led and wants to please everyone. Mind you, by the end of the book, I admired him but only because he finally took a stand.
Race relations is the main theme of the book but additional information about the fishing industry, politics and the media certainly rounded out the book. Kimber deserves praise for dealing with many difficult issues and at the same time writing an interesting story.
Fast forward to the year 2002. Uhuru Kwacha, the former Raymond Carter, is a lawyer standing in the courtroom of Ward Justice. His client is a bookkeeper for the City of Halifax charged with embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars. Uhuru tells Mr. Justice Justice that his client is pleading not guilty and defends his actions because he used the money to benefit former residents of Africville and their descendents. Uhuru knows he is on very shaky legal ground and, in fact, he is really making up his argument on the fly. The judge is very short with him and denies bail for his client. Two years later when the trial starts Uhuru is leading a defense team that includes a black female law professor and a white former law professor with considerable courtroom experience. Ward Justice is the trial judge. The shared history, as well as their separate experiences in the intervening years, of the two men underpins the court case.
Reparations is a masterful account of the experiences of blacks in modern Nova Scotia. Kimber shows how pervasive racism was in the 1960’s and beyond but he also shows that success was possible for some in the black community. The black characters are believable because they have failings as well as virtues.
As for the white characters in the book, they seem more universally venal. The head of the fishing company is particularly malevolent and his buddy who mentors Ward through law school and into politics is a nasty piece of work too. Ward is not evil per se but he is easily led and wants to please everyone. Mind you, by the end of the book, I admired him but only because he finally took a stand.
Race relations is the main theme of the book but additional information about the fishing industry, politics and the media certainly rounded out the book. Kimber deserves praise for dealing with many difficult issues and at the same time writing an interesting story.
Gemarkeerd
gypsysmom | Aug 25, 2017 | Links
Officiële startpagina (English)
Wikipedia (English)
Onze site gebruikt cookies om diensten te leveren, prestaties te verbeteren, voor analyse en (indien je niet ingelogd bent) voor advertenties. Door LibraryThing te gebruiken erken je dat je onze Servicevoorwaarden en Privacybeleid gelezen en begrepen hebt. Je gebruik van de site en diensten is onderhevig aan dit beleid en deze voorwaarden.