Synopses & Reviews
A brilliantly original and exotic novel that brings to life the mysterious world of a Chinese immigrant who fled China in the 1890s to seek a better life in Jamaica--a mesmerizing tale of love, longing, and hidden identity. Jamaica is in turmoil--still reeling from the racial and economic tensions of Emancipation, which brought Indian and Chinese workers to the island from other parts of the British Empire.
Lowe, the Chinese immigrant, is in his fifties--the owner of a small shop in an impoverished plantation village, and the guardian of a secret that is gradually revealed. Writing to a long-estranged daughter, Lowe tells her what happened during their years apart--a tale of exile from China, of estrangement from family, of shipboard adventures, of an unwanted pregnancy, of the arrangement that was made to avoid a possible scandal, of the three decades of living as man and wife with a light-skinned black woman named Sylvie. It is a story of the destruction of a world: the burning of Lowe's shop. It describes Lowe's dream of building a Pagoda--a school where Chinese workers might learn about their history and become a part of Jamaican life.
Patricia Powell's rich and artful narrative carries us to an extraordinary climax, in a novel that captivates by the sheer force of its storytelling.
Synopsis
In this brilliantly original and exotic novel, a young writer brings to life the mysterious world of an immigrant who flees China in the 1890s to seek a better life in Jamaica.
The setting is a poor village outside a sugar plantation. The immigrant is Lowe, about 50, the owner of a small shop and guardian of a secret that is gradually revealed. Writing to a long-estranged daughter, Lowe tells her what has happened during their years apart -- a tale of exile from China, of separation from family, of shipboard adventures, of an unwanted pregnancy and the arrangement that was made to avoid a scandal -- and the three decades of living as man and wife with a light-skinned black woman named Sylvie.
This is the story of the destruction of a world: the burning of Lowe's shop; and of the creation of a dream: the building of the Pagoda, a school where Chinese workers can learn about their history and become a part of Jamaican life.
Artful and extraordinary, a mesmerizing tale of love, longing, and hidden identity.
About the Author
Patricia Powell was born in Jamaica in 1966. She received her B.A. from Wellesley College and an M.F.A. in creative writing from Brown University. She is Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Fiction at Harvard University. The Pagoda is her third novel.