iCowboy.com
 
Search
  Shop

Agriculture

Barns

Cattle Books

Dairy

Farmer's Almanac

Pigs

Poultry

Ranching Books

Tractors

Art

Calendars

Country Cooking

Country Music Books

Cowboy Apparel Books

Cowboy Books

Cowgirls

Dogs

Fishing

Honky Tonkin' Books

Horse Books

Old West Books

Pickup Trucks

Rodeo Books

Stock Car Racing

Veterinarian

Western Novels

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Agriculture

The Farming of Bones
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

The Farming of Bones

SKU:  

Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 

In a 1930s Dominican Republic village, the scream of a woman in labor rings out like the shot heard around Hispaniola. Every detail of the birth scene--the balance of power between the middle-aged Señora and her Haitian maid, the babies' skin color, not to mention which child is to survive--reverberates throughout Edwidge Danticat's Farming of Bones. In fact, rather than a celebration of fecundity, the unexpected double delivery gels into a metaphor for the military-sponsored mass murder of Haitian emigrants. As the Señora's doctor explains: "Many of us start out as twins in the belly and do away with the other."

But Danticat's powerful second novel is far from a currently modish victimization saga, and can hold its own with such modern classics as One Hundred Years of Solitude and The Color Purple. Its watchful narrator, the Señora's shy Haitian housemaid, describes herself as "one of those sea stones that sucks its colors inside and loses its translucence once it's taken out into the sun." An astute observer of human character, Amabelle Désir is also a conduit for the author's tart, poetic prose. Her lover, Sebastian, has "arms as wide as one of my bare thighs," while the Señora's complicit officer husband is "still shorter than the average man, even in his military boots."

The orphaned Amabelle comes to assume almost messianic proportions, but she is entirely fictional, as is the town of Alegría where the tale begins. The genocide and exodus, however, are factual. Indeed, the atrocities committed by Dominican president Rafael Trujillo's army back in 1937 rival those of Duvalier's Touton Macoutes. History has rendered Trujillo's carnage much less visible than Duvalier's, but no less painful. As Amabelle's father once told her, "Misery won't touch you gentle. It always leaves its thumbprints on you; sometimes it leaves them for others to see, sometimes for nobody but you to know of." Thanks to Danticat's stellar novel, the world will now know. --Jean Lenihan

 
List Price: $15.00
Our Price: $10.20 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $4.80 (31%)
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Promotions
  • This title is eligible for Amazon Fall Textbook promotions. Get unlimited free Two-Day Shipping for three months with a free trial of Amazon Prime. Add $100 worth of eligible textbooks to your cart to qualify. Sign up at checkout. New members only.  Here's how (restrictions apply)

Product Details
Author:Edwidge Danticat
Paperback:320 pages
Publisher:Penguin (Non-Classics)
Publication Date:September 01, 1999
ISBN:0140280499
Package Length:7.7 inches
Package Width:5.4 inches
Package Height:0.6 inches
Package Weight:0.35 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 60 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

5Breaking Bones.....  Sep 19, 2008
Sad, but stunningly beautiful, FARMING OF THE BONES is a powerfully written evocative account of the horror of the genocide committed in 1937 against poor Haitian cane workers and others by the Dominican General Rafael Trujillo.

Through the voice of a young orphaned Haitian woman, Amabelle Desir, we follow the lives of desperate Haitian exiles working the Dominican cane fields in deplorable conditions with paltry wages and sparse living conditions.

Danticat is a master storyteller and her prose lifts and carries, even as the atrocities of what she is telling unfold on the page. She travels a very painful path with humbling grace. She allows the reader to witness grave injustices while keeping them safely wrapped in her beautiful and poignant prose.
.
Dreaming... remembering...and family are strong elements which serve to enrich the story and draw the reader in as the reality of the despair becomes readily
apparent. Trujillo wants to 'whiten' his populace and thus begins the recounting of an unimaginable and shocking ethnic cleansing.

Towards the end of the novel, a man says "Famous men never truly die... It is only those nameless and faceless who vanish like smoke in the early morning air." ...on the island which Haiti and The Dominican Republic share. Through the eyes of the narrator, Amabelle working as a maid in the Dominican Republic, we see scores of Haitians cruely massacred.
None of those killed is anyone famous, nearly all the slaughtered are poor Haitians working as cheap labor in the neighboring country, but Amabelle's story serves to refute those words spoken about the nameless and faceless of the earth.

In this book, they are remembered, and in her story they do have names and faces.

5Excellent Service!  Jul 13, 2008
This book came in great condition and quicker than they told me! This is a great service! You won't be disappointed.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

4A Woman's Odyssey  Feb 10, 2008
The heroine of The Farming of Bones is a young girl named Amabelle who, we learn, was left behind in the Dominican Republic when her parents are drowned in the Massacre River. The family that takes Amabelle in as a domestic servant finds her there on the riverbank, a little girl with bleeding knees. Later, when Amabelle is suddenly offered a chance to return to Haiti by Dr. Javier, a kind man who envisions a role for her at a clinic on the other side of the border, we are drawn into a long journey. Her conversations in darkness with her lover Sebastien, who works in the cane fields, confront the bittern dilemma of their lives:

"Sometimes the people in the fields, when they're tired and angry, they say we're an orphaned people," he said. "They say we are the burnt crud at the bottom of the pot. They say some people don't belong anywhere and that's us. I say we are a group of vwayajè, wayfarers."

Amabelle recalls her childhood near Cap Haitien where she spent hours playing in the Citadel, from which she peered out at the sea. "From the safety of these rooms I saw the entire northern cape; the yellow-green mountains, the rice valley, the king's palace... the queen's court across the meadow." Space, freedom, and possibility once claimed in the era of the Haitian Revolution have, thus, entered the psyche of Amabelle and remain alive in her consciousness.

But her real-world struggle is full of obstacles. There is a rumor emerging that Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo wants to get rid of any Haitian not working in a cane mill. A Haitian woman in Amabelle's village expresses anxiety about not having any "papers in my palms to say where I belong." Amabelle, too, feels displaced and fearful. "I had no papers to show that I belonged either here or in Haiti where I was born."
As the story evolves, General Trujillo's army turns on the Haitian people, committing atrocities that are unforgotten to this day. Amabelle escapes, miraculously, to the other side with a friend, Yves. Many friends die in the process and her beloved Sebastien is lost forever. The passages of their imagined communication are like prose poems injected into the darkness of this novel.

This is a love story and a woman's odyssey. It holds the history of Haiti within its pages and the whispers the possibility of a better time in measured, evocative prose. In the end, the "place to lay it down" is the Massacre River itself. Danticat leads us to the water's edge with Amabelle. Like an artery running though the body of a nation, it is the source of life and memory that carries us forward.

A beautiful book.


4 of 7 found the following review helpful:

4Two Languages, Two Countries, Two People, One Island  Dec 08, 2007
Edwidge Danticat's powerful story about the 1937 massacre of Haitians in the Dominican Republic on the orders of dictator Rafael Trujillo resonates in these times of increased awareness of genocides throughout the world. In direct language but lyrical structure, Danticat offers an intimate account of a woman caught between two worlds, one by birth and one by adoption.

The narrator, Amabelle, is a young Haitian woman who lives as a servant in a wealthy Dominican household. Taken in by this family after witnessing the drowning of her parents, Amabelle has grown up with her mistress, Senor Valencia, and they are fast friends - at least, as much as their different social standings will allow. Valencia marries Pico, an officer in the Dominican army, and Amabelle falls in love with Sebastien, an outspoken sugar cane cutter and would-be rebel. Sebastien views the unfolding tensions between the two ethnic groups with clear eyes and tries to convince Amabelle that they are in danger. When Amabelle finally accepts this truth, she makes plans to escape the imminent slaughter, even then not believing that it will really happen. What she witnesses and what she must do to survive changes her forever.

Danticat uses the imagery of duality to illustrate the segregation, the dangers of division, and the unseen unity in this country. For example, Valencia's twins (one named after Trujillo himself) represent the Dominican and the Haitians sides of the country, one light and one dark, born from the same parents. Ironically, Valencia's husband, one of the officers in charge of carrying out the slaughter, supplies the "dark" genes in his own daughter. Readers who want to look deeper into the story will find many examples of duality, irony, and water imagery.

Recommended companion books: In the Time of the Butterflies, Drown, Breath, Eyes, Memory (Oprah's Book Club).

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Moved...  Jan 11, 2007
This was the first book I read from this author and I can tell you, it will not be the last. The writing is amazing. This author has an amazing gift with imagery! She will make you see (and feel) what she is writing about as if you are there in the story. It simply took my breath away! A must read. Tears came from my eyes as I read the last few lines in the book. The story captivated me.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
iCowboy.comChrisSparksEntertainment.com