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"Cancer colonizes," writes Rachel Manley, describing her father's battle with the illness. "It subdues. It imposes an entirely foreign culture. It wins by dividing the body against itself.... We become a battlefield in which we are fighting ourselves." When the author's father, Michael Manley, three-term prime minister of Jamaica, succumbed to the disease in the late 1990s, she set out to write about his extraordinary life, and to come to terms with the particular complications of their relationship. A moving tribute emerges to the man who embraced vital yet radical social reform in the 1970s, as well as a poetic, unflinching testament to a country, and the powerful bond that she and her father shared.
Her reference to the battlefield is an apt one. As the narrative seamlessly moves between Michael Manley's final days and Rachel's recounting of their history together since her birth, it becomes clear that their relationship was fraught with both ordinary and extraordinary trials. In some ways, their story is typical: a daughter struggles to cope with a father whose attentions are often elsewhere--Manley's dedication to his political career often removed him from the immediate concerns of his family. Yet Rachel would also have to cope, as the only child of her father's first marriage, with learning to accept four stepmothers and their children. Rachel grows into adulthood as a woman in emotional exile, who must learn that her father's love endures despite shifts within her family and in Jamaica's social and political fortunes. She comes to recognize that her battles are with herself. "I knew that, deeper than all the currents his life had created in me, lay my own fate--the fate of my own genes.... I could feel his resolve pushing me forward.... I'd got far enough to start my own engines." Slipstream is honest and heartbreaking and luminously written--and eloquent proof that Rachel Manley has gracefully embraced her own fate. --Svenja Soldovieri
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
“One of those rare books that remind you why we read and write in the first place.” –
The Globe and Mail“
Slipstream takes its readers to Jamaica. It is a book infused with Manley’s rich, warm voice, that speaks the dialect of family, those words with secret meanings that only a few fold understand.” –
Edmonton Journal“
Slipstream is an utterly beautiful book. The combination of exquisite language and raw emotion moved me deeply.” –Anita Rau Badami
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.