The intertwined narratives of this novel reveal the brutalizing effects of slavery, not only on the victim but also on the oppressor: the master can no more escape its dehumanizing effects than can the slave.
While researching in Nantes, a port city enriched by the slave trade, celebrated French novelist Fabienne Kanor came across a chilling report written in 1774 by the commander of a slave ship, Le Soleil. Captain Louis Mosnier recounted the loss of valuable "cargo" when fourteen African women escaped from the ship's hold to leap overboard rather than face enslavement. Half of them drowned or were eaten by sharks.
From this tragic incident, Kanor has composed a powerful, polyphonic novel in which each woman tells her own vivid story. Their disparate lives from differing cultures, conditions, and perspectives intersect through their violent mistreatment, profound sense of disorientation, and collective act of resistance. These intertwined narratives reveal the brutalizing effects of slavery, not only on the victim but also on the oppressor: the master can no more escape its dehumanizing effects than can the slave.
Fabienne Kanor is a journalist and filmmaker and the author of numerous works of fiction and drama, including the novel Faire l'aventure, which received the Prix Carbet de la Caraïbe du Tout-Monde for the best literary work in French or French Creole from the Caribbean and the Americas.
Lynn E. Palermo is Associate Professor of French Studies at Susquehanna University.
Gladys M. Francisis Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies at Georgia State University.
[A] tragic tale... important.-- "Literary Hub"
[Kanor] plunges us in the holds of a slave ship in 1774.... Her short, suspended sentences allow immersion in the heart of these agonizing journeys that punctuated the sad episode of slavery.
While researching in Nantes, a port city enriched by the slave trade, celebrated French novelist Fabienne Kanor came across a chilling report written in 1774 by the commander of a slave ship, Le Soleil. Captain Louis Mosnier recounted the loss of valuable "cargo" when fourteen African women escaped from the ship's hold to leap overboard rather than face enslavement. Half of them drowned or were eaten by sharks. From this tragic incident, Kanor has composed a powerful, polyphonic novel in which each woman tells her own vivid story. Their disparate lives from differing cultures, conditions, and perspectives intersect through their violent mistreatment, profound sense of disorientation, and collective act of resistance. These intertwined narratives reveal the brutalizing effects of slavery, not only on the victim but also on the oppressor: the master can no more escape its dehumanizing effects than can the slave.
"[Kanor] plunges us in the holds of a slave ship in 1774.... Her short, suspended sentences allow immersion in the heart of these agonizing journeys that punctuated the sad episode of slavery. "--Le Nouvel Observateur
[Kanor] plunges us in the holds of a slave ship in 1774.... Her short, suspended sentences allow immersion in the heart of these agonizing journeys that punctuated the sad episode of slavery.
Fabienne Kanor, Assistant Professor of French and Francophone Studies at Penn State University, is a writer and filmmaker. She is the author of numerous works of fiction and drama, including the novel Faire l'aventure, which received the Prix Carbet de la Cara