Margaret Cezair-Thompson





Margaret Cezair-Thompson

Author profile


born
Jamaica

genre


About this author

Margaret Cezair-Thompson is the author of a widely acclaimed previous novel, The True History of Paradise. Other publications include short fiction, essays, and articles in Callaloo, The Washington Post, Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Graham House Review, and Elle. Born in Jamaica, West Indies, she teaches literature and creative writing at Wellesley College."


Average rating: 3.45 · 999 ratings · 215 reviews · 2 distinct works
The Pirate's Daughter
3.41 of 5 stars 3.41 avg rating — 893 ratings — published 2007 — 12 editions
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The True History of Paradise
3.79 of 5 stars 3.79 avg rating — 106 ratings — published 1999 — 5 editions
My rating:
didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing
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“This is a story that could only have taken place in the tropics, where the climate draws sea rovers, pirates, and desperadoes from all corners of the world. They come and go, these adventurers, bedazzled and dazzling, and they leave women behind, lovers, who repeat outlandish tales, murmuring to themselves unheard, and if heard, not believed ...”
Margaret Cezair-Thompson, The Pirate's Daughter

“I performed the part of an odd, quiet woman, and performed it to everyone's satisfaction. When others slept, I was awake; when they woke, they found me quietly occupied. I took walks by myself. I read and sewed or sat in the garden with my own self for company. I was not missed. I have never been missed. I had all the manners and necessities of other women of my society, yet I was without society.

... I simply surrendered to that brute unhappiness which had always been close at hand. I no longer made the effort to appear civil, for by then I loathed civilisation from the bottom of my heart. Solitude, after a while, becomes the worst kind of savagery.”
Margaret Cezair-Thompson, The True History of Paradise

“Let the winds come from the sea and blow seeds about, seeds of the north, south, east, and west. Let the moths beat their wings against the windows and the fishermen cast curious glances. Let them come, let them return, let them reach.”
Margaret Cezair-Thompson

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