Blue, Emmelie Prophete
Blue, Emmelie Prophete
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Blue

Author: Emmelie Prophète, Tina Kover

Narrator: Krystel Roche

Unabridged: 3 hr 23 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/01/2022


Synopsis

An award-winning Haitian novel about silence, beauty, and the solidarity of tears.Airports are distillations of the world. I like thinking of them that way. The hope of leaving and the desire to come home, existing side by side. Any voyage is possible. My mind flies off toward the blue province once again. I don’t know, anymore, why I always associate it with blue. It isn’t even my favorite color.Traveling alone from Miami to Port-au-Prince, our narrator finds comfort at the airport. She feels free to ponder the silence that surrounds her homeland, her mother, her aunts, and her own inner thoughts. Between two places, she sees how living in poverty keeps women silent, forging their identities around practicality and resilience. From a distance, she is drawn inevitably homeward toward her family and the glittering blue Caribbean Sea.Blue comes alive through vivid images crowding the page, just as memories do in real life, as if the author is trying to sort through them, to come to grips with her own emotional conflict. Balancing the pain and anger are spiritual bonds that connect the author to the women who have come before her, who have created her, and with Haiti itself, her motherland. No amount of glittering opportunity up north can prevent her from finding her way home.

About Emmelie Prophète

Born in Port-au-Prince, where she still resides, Emmelie Prophète is a poet, novelist, journalist, and director of the National Library of Haiti. Her publications include Blue (Le testament des solitudes), which earned her the Grand Prix littéraire de l'Association des écrivains de langue française (ADELF) in 2009; Le reste du temps (2010), which tells the story of her special relationship with journalist Jean Dominique, who was murdered in 2000; Impasse Dignité (2012); and Le bout du monde est une fenêtre (2015).


Reviews

Goodreads review by Geo on February 01, 2024

Translation widget on the blog!!! O poveste de viață cutremurătoare despre cum este sa suferi atunci când pierzi totul si despre speranța. Despre a doua șansa. Recenzia mea completă o găsiți aici: [URL not allowed]......more

Goodreads review by Suz on April 13, 2023

Solid 4 Steely stars for a feel good story. Easy listening while driving and being a busy mum. The poor narrator was a bit sad, his voice was very very deep, and at stages it almost sounded like he was spitting! It turns out the protagonist is 'Ginny' and I thought all the way through she was 'Jenny......more

Goodreads review by Denise on February 22, 2017

Blue is not your typical Danielle Steel novel. She takes some very intense subjects, such as homelessness, Alzheimer's, death, relationship with a sister, death and abuse 'of trust' in the Catholic Church. Hoping Steel writes more books of substance in the future.......more

Goodreads review by Laura on October 24, 2016

I always feel centered after finishing a DS book. She has a knack of bringing a heart breaking story to a conclusion that leaves you with maybe not a happy ending but feeling it ended just right.......more

Goodreads review by Janine on April 11, 2017

Loved this story about Ginny who takes in a homeless boy and discovers he has been the victim of abuse. She has her own demons to deal with as well, and together with the help of a lawyer they eventually gain justice for Blue. The narrator was so easy to listen to as well. I really enjoy Danielle St......more


Quotes

“Krystal Roche's youthful voice melds childhood memories with adult reflection, propelling this novel into the realm of poetic memoir.… Roche's Haitian cadence adds a dreaminess to all the details.… Roche's thoughtful pace weaves the words together, rendering chapter demarcations irrelevant. In Roche's voice, the narrative becomes poetry, highlighting Prophete's talent in this genre.” AudioFile Magazine“Prophète, via Kover’s translation, demonstrates an impressive gift for lyrical prose. What makes Blue stand out is the way she turns familiar spaces—like, say, airports—into the sites of moments of beauty and reflection.” Words Without Borders“Impressionistic…evokes matrilineage…ruminates on travel—migration, dislocation, and exile.” LitHub