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The long song  Cover Image Book Book

The long song

Levy, Andrea 1956- (Author).

Summary: A tale, set in Jamaica during the last turbulent years of slavery and the early years of freedom, that portrays the life of the slave girl July, her mother Kitty, and Caroline Mortimer, the white woman who owned the plantation where they worked.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780374192174
  • ISBN: 9780670064113 (hc)
  • ISBN: 9780143173953 (Penguin trade pbk.)
  • Physical Description: print
    313 p. ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: Toronto : Hamish Hamilton ; Penguin Canada, c2010.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [311]-313).
Subject: English -- Jamaica -- Fiction
Slavery -- Jamaica -- Fiction
Sugar plantations -- Jamaica -- Fiction
Women -- Jamaica -- Fiction
Jamaica -- History -- 19th century -- Fiction
Genre: Historical fiction.
General fiction.

Available copies

  • 14 of 15 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at McBride & District Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 15 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
McBride Fic Lev (Text) 35191000153946 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2010 April #2
    In the inexplicable absence of a definitive and revelatory history of Jamaica's nearly 300 years of slavery, Levy gamely steps into the void with the lively and engaging novel of Miss July, a slave born on the ironically named Amity sugar plantation. The mulatto child of a black slave and her white overseer, July's destiny was that of a canefield laborer until Caroline Mortimer took over the plantation upon the death of her brother. Renamed the more genteel "Marguerite," July is promoted to the manor house, which brings her into contact with the new overseer, Robert Goodwin. More liberal than his lusty predecessors, Robert not only fails to abuse July, he also falls in love with her. Yet when the institution of slavery is abolished by royal decree, Goodwin's attempts to gainfully employ his former slaves end tragically for all concerned. Charming, alarming, Levy's vibrant historical novel shimmers with all the artifice and chicanery slave owners felt compelled to exert. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2010 May
    Lively language marks Levy's successful second act

    Andrea Levy's Small Island is a hard act to follow. Winner of numerous British awards in 2004 and 2005, the novel was catapulted across the Atlantic to further praise and critical acclaim. While Small Island follows the lives of four characters in post-WWII London, in Levy's latest, The Long Song, the location shifts to 19th-century Jamaica in and around the years following the abolition of slavery. Though it lacks the span and richness of her earlier work, Levy's exuberance, lively language and finely honed sense of the droll—mixed with the gravity of historical events—make this new novel a pleasure to read.

    The Long Song is sung by Miss July, a former slave whose life began well before the 10-day Baptist War of 1831 brought an end to slavery on the island. Born on the Amity sugar plantation, the product of the rape of an African field hand by a Scottish overseer, July is taken up as a young girl by her owner's meddling, needy sister Caroline, renamed Marguerite and moved into the house as a lady's maid. It is under the somewhat inattentive eye of her mistress that July hears about the events that led to the end of her enforced servitude. But it is the domestic that interests her—the caprice and cruelty of her masters, the subtle ways she and the other house slaves conspire to fool Caroline and the rivalries July forms with other mulatto ladies of the town as they compete with one another for male attention. When the handsome and progressive English overseer Robert Goodwin comes to the plantation, his presence sets off a chain of events that prove life-changing for both July and her mistress.

    Levy plays with July's story by bracketing the novel with an introduction and epilogue by July's son Thomas Kinsman, a successful Jamaican publisher whose very position in the town indicates the drastic change in the fortunes of Jamaican blacks since July's childhood. In truth, Thomas cannot keep out of his mother's story and periodically breaks in, allegedly to offer advice or to comply with her request for more paper, but really to remind us that no tale ever belongs to just one teller. Who is telling the better story is up to the reader.

    Levy's wit and her expert control of well-populated comic scenes, so familiar from Small Island, are not lost in The Long Song. At first, the humor seems an uneasy fit with the subject matter, but Levy's mastery of her subject and the alternating voices of July and Kinsman, who so confidently claim their own stories, provide a solid bedrock for the occasional dip into farce.

     

    Copyright 2010 BookPage Reviews.

  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 January #1
    Returning to Jamaica, her parents' homeland and the context of her Whitbread and Orange Prize winner Small Island, Levy introduces us to Miss July, child of a field slave brought into the sugar plantation's great house and essentially trapped there after slavery ends. A nice pairing with Allende's Island Beneath the Sea, above, but this book is important all on its own. With an author tour; reading group guide. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2010 March #4

    A distinctive narrative voice and a beguiling plot distinguish Levy's fifth novel (after Orange Prize–winning Small Island). A British writer of Jamaican descent, Levy draws upon history to recall the island's slave rebellion of 1832. The unreliable narrator pretends to be telling the story of a woman called July, born as the result of a rape of a field slave, but it soon becomes obvious that the narrator is July herself. Taken as a house slave when she's eight years old, July is later seduced by the pretentiously moralistic English overseer after he marries the plantation's mistress; his clergyman father has assured him that "a married man might do as he pleases." Related in July's lilting patois, the narrative encompasses scenes of shocking brutality and mass carnage, but also humor, sometimes verging on farce. Levy's satiric eye registers the venomous racism of the white characters and is equally candid in relating the degrees of social snobbery around skin color among the blacks themselves, July included. Slavery destroys the humanity of everyone is Levy's subtext, while the cliffhanger ending suggests (one hopes) a sequel. (May)

    [Page 48]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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