An impossible return A novel

Caroline Laurent

Book - 2022

"An epic love story set against a backdrop of injustice, devastating secrets, and the painful price of independence. It's 1967 in the Chagos archipelago--a group of atolls in the Indian Ocean--and life is peaceful and easy for hardworking Marie. Her fierce independence and love for her home are quickly apparent to Gabriel, the handsome and sophisticated Mauritian secretary to the archipelago's administrator; it's love at first sight. As these two lovers from neighboring islands welcome a new son, Jošphin, a bright future seems possible. But Gabriel is hiding a terrible secret. The Mauritian government is negotiating independence from Britain, and this deal with the devil will mean evacuating the Chagos, without warning ...or mercy--a betrayal that will put their love to the test. Inspired by a shocking travesty of justice, the repercussions of which still reverberate more than fifty years later, bestselling Franco-Mauritian author Caroline Laurent paints a shimmering portrait of island life, a sensual paradise lost, and a gorgeous star-crossed love against all odds"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Published
Seattle : Amazon Crossing 2022.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Caroline Laurent (author)
Other Authors
Jeffrey Zuckerman, 1987- (translator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Translated from French.
"Previously published as Rivage de la colère by Éditions Les Escales in France in 2020"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
339 pages : illustrations, maps ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781542035019
9781542032339
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Franco-Mauritian writer Laurent, in her potent English-language debut, overlays a tragic love story onto a powerful account of historical injustice in the Chagos Archipelago. When Mauritius declares its independence in 1967, its ruling party strikes a deal with the U.K. to evict the Indigenous Chagossians and to turn their largest island over to the U.S. for use as a military base, barring the Chagossians from ever returning to their homeland. Laurent effectively condenses the complicated bureaucratic machinations to human scale with the story of Marie, a young Chagossian mother who falls in love with Gabriel, a secretary to the island's Mauritian administrator. Their love--and the fate of their infant son, Joséphin--becomes entangled in these political forces, as Gabriel's Mauritian citizenship confers him a protected status denied to Marie. The many moments of gruesome colonial brutality are undercut by the Chagossians' tenderness, courage, and simmering rage in response to incalculable loss. Gabriel and Marie's saga, which involves a hunger strike, murder, and other dramatic episodes, is interspersed with a piercing 2019 narrative from an adult Joséphin: "Believe me. Our fate affects you all," he notes. Thanks to Laurent's devastating work, readers will, indeed, have their eyes and hearts opened. (Oct.)

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