Brown Girl in the Ring

Electronic resource

English language

Published Oct. 31, 2001 by Grand Central Publishing.

ISBN:
978-0-7595-6182-3
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
53171298

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5 stars (2 reviews)

Set in Toronto after the turn of the millennium, Brown Girl in the Ring focuses on "The Burn," the inner city left when Toronto's economic base collapsed. Young Ti-Jeanne lives with her grandmother, who runs a trade in herbal medicine that is vital to the disenfranchised of The Burn. A fascinating cast of characters combined with the dark world of Afro-Caribbean magic create an altogether original and compelling story by an intriguing new voice.

6 editions

Superb!

5 stars

I had thought that Red Birds would easily be my Book of the Month until, just a couple of days later, I started reading Brown Girl In The Ring. Now I will be absolutely amazed if anything else I read during October will manage to top Nalo Hopkinson's writing! I picked this one on a whim because I needed a fifth Jamaican author for that country's WorldReads post (coming on the 5th November) and was attracted to Brown Girl In The Ring by its seriously bizarre cover art. Essentially a dystopian novel set in a ghettoised Toronto, Hopkinson draws in elements of West Indian mythology, Caribbean magical realism and glimpses of oh-did-I-really-just-read-that gruesomeness to create an astoundingly breathtaking tale. This book was actually published twenty years ago, but it feels new and vibrant and very relevant to today. How had I never heard of Nalo Hopkinson before?!

At the heart …

Review of 'Brown Girl in the Ring' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I read this book back when I was in school (many years ago it seems), back then it left an impression on my 17 year old self. It was a book I actually enjoyed getting as homework.

I decided to revisit it, and I'm glad I did, a lot of the characters and storyline were muddled up in time, and I feel that I got a fresh read out of this book again.

Having grown up in some of the areas that are in this book (and more importantly around the time this book was published) , it definitely brings me a bit closer to the story.