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Lynda Reads

Bite size reflections on the plethora of stimuli that drift in through my (more or less) open mind: commentaries, ideas, book reviews, resonances struck and ire stirred. My way of exposing my side of the conversation with other minds encountered. I also blog about the Okal Rel Universe, my own fictional enterprise, at Reality Skimming.)

by Lynda: Sci-Fi Author, Educator, Technologist.


Sunday, May 22, 2005

The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson

The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson The 'salt roads' of this novel's title are the blood, sweat and tears of Ezili's people as they struggle against prejudice and slavery to achieve fulfillment in their lives. Three women are featured, separated by centuries and geography, but united by the touch of a troubled goddess. Ezili is both powerful and helpless. She is a force without a will, and then a will without the freedom to act. Over the course of the novel, the heroines age as the goddess grows up.


A key moment, for Ezili, is the scene in which she clashes, through the agency of of one of the women, with a rival god bent on reckless violence. But for the most part, Ezili knows no more about who and what she is than the reader does, and the richness of the novel is derived from the life experience of its protagonists. Whether or not the thematic aspects achieve a satisfactory chord for the reader, the crisp characterizations and historical details surly will.

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