Review from Herizons
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Review from Maple
Tree Literary Supplement
By JC Peters
“Everything about the snake-woman was magical from the
start, even the way she arrived without our seeing, though
we were all looking.” So begins the title story of Olive
Senior's Arrival of the
Snake Woman. Like the snake woman, Senior's stories
weave their magic unexpectedly, intelligently, and yes, with
a good dose of magic. Both come in quietly and make a deep
impact, but never quite where you expect.”
Arrival of the Snake
Woman is Senior's most recent in a long line of
accomplishments, including many awards, like the Norman
Washington Manley Foundation Award for Excellence for
preserving Jamaican cultural heritage. These stories do
share a Jamaican setting, but otherwise showcase Senior's
masterful range as a storyteller. Characters vary in age,
race, class, gender and even era, but each story is rich and
economical, tangible with the heat, sweat, and life of the
Jamaican landscape, and never without a the gentle bite of
subtle social commentary.
A Toronto-based author, Senior turns to her memory and
imagination to return to her birthplace, choosing always to
show rather than tell. This edition of the book features an
afterword by scholar H. Nigel Thomas, and includes excerpts
from interviews with Senior. Thomas addresses Senior's use
of “nation language,” or writing the local dialect of a
place (in this case Jamaican Creole) into an English
language story as a form of reclaiming the sound or language
of a colonial place. When asked about her political motives,
Senior responds: “I took the decision to allow my characters
to speak as they did in real life. It's a choice that came
to me intuitively rather than ideologically. Of course, I've
come to learn how significant that choice was, as I became
acquainted with the debate of language as a political
issue.” As a result, the political bent of her stories rises
out of their authenticity, and never through preaching.
One of the recurring themes in the collection is race and
difference. The title story, for example, tells of the first
foreigner the small Jamaican town of Mount Rose has ever
seen. They are fascinated and threatened by this “Miss
Coolie,” sure she is at once an exotic and sexy temptress, a
child of the devil, a caring mother, and a successful
businesswoman. Her presence is a challenge to the tradition
and stasis of the small town, and her young friend, the
narrator, begins to see his home, its authorities, and his
own future in a new light. In this story, she is revealed as
neither a saviour nor a devil, and neither is anyone else,
including the cruel white priest who refuses her sick child
medicine. Each character is written compassionately, and we
learn not about human intolerance or cruelty but about the
complex shifts that are catalysed by the Other.
The priest is not the only villain forgiven in these
stories. Discrimination arises in these communities because
of a fault endemic in the culture, rather than in the people
themselves. Senior prefers to look at what happens between
black and white, literally and figuratively. Many of these
characters are obsessed with the exact shade of another's
skin. In one story, the narrator comments, “All in all Lily
has inherited the best features of both parents but one
thing people cannot understand is how Mr and Mrs DaSilva are
so dark (they really are, when you think of it, but money
whitens is the motto today) and Lily has come out almost
white (white, you would say if you didn't know any better).”
In another story, a little girl writes to her mother of her
experiences with her two grandmothers, one black, one white.
She encounters such scrutiny about the colour of her skin
and texture of her hair that when someone calls her
beautiful, she writes: “Mummy, how can I be beautiful my
skin is so dark darker than yours and Maureen's and Jason's
and Auntie Rita's and my hair is so coarse not like yours or
Maureen's but then Maureen's father is white. Is that why
Maureen called me a nigger?”
Children like this recur in the collection, and their
innocent perspectives only throw the sickness of the world
around them into sharp relief. Senior says her own childhood
was quite lonely, and her stories “reflected the fact that I
felt like an isolated, lonely child.” With issues of race,
class, sexism and even child abuse, Senior is identifying
the younger generation as those who must be saved, given
strength and the ability to change things, while pleading
with the older generation to provide guidance in a confusing
world. The final story of the collection, “Lily, Lily,” has
a young girl impregnanted, hidden, and abused, only to
return years later empowered as a mother who can protect her
daughter from the same suffering. Senior identifies more
than a few social problems in her collection of stories, but
ultimately leaves us with hope and confidence in the little
girls who eventually grow up.
In all, the collection is smart, richly imagined, never
preachy, and a genuine pleasure to read. Add another
accomplishment to Senior's long list.
Review by JC Peters,
Maple Tree Literary Supplement
http://www.mtls.ca/issue5/writings-review-peters.php