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Paint the Town Red

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Brian Meeks’s novel begins with the release from jail of a young Rastafarian who was involved in the political violence that erupted when forces hostile to the radical socialist currents within the 1972 Manley administration sought to destabilize Jamaican society. As Mikey takes a minibus through Kingston, his story is told as a series of carefully crafted flashbacks. A series of encounters and the memories they provoke reveal that few have escaped unscathed from those there are the dead, the imprisoned, the maddened, the turncoats, and those like Mikey who carry the burden of those times. One of the encounters is, we learn in a postscript to the novel, with Rohan who, at the time of Mikey’s imprisonment, is a youth in a family with which Mikey is involved, particularly Rohan’s sister, who is killed in the shootout. Rohan has suffered this loss deeply, but has survived to move forward, while Mikey, with the stigma of his imprisonment, is trapped in the past. It is Rohan, we discover, who is telling Mikey’s story, a revelation that casts a reflexive light not only on the relationship between the actual author and the events he fictionalizes, but the relationship between the novelist who, whatever his origins, writes from a position of relative security in comparison to the lives that form his subject.

120 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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Brian Meeks

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Profile Image for Christian Gurdin.
37 reviews
December 12, 2024
As much as i love Brian Meeks, this novel feels like a political theorist trying to write fiction. Nonetheless, if anyone is interested in the political history of the 70s in Jamaica, especially with regards to the scene at UWI and the garrison politics that emerged between the JLP vs PNP and the Workers Party of Jamaica, then this novel may still have some merit.

Also some nice nods to the vibrancy of the reggae scene and the growth of Rastafari culture of dread at the time.
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