Brown Girl in the Ring

Nalo Hopkinson
Brown Girl in the Ring Cover

Brown Girl in the Ring

paulinezed
2/16/2013
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I'd had this sitting on my shelf since it came out, but kept giving up on it due to some clunky exposition in the opening chapter or two. I'm glad I pushed past the clunky bits, because once the world is established and suspension of disbelief has been attained, it's a stunningly good read. The story focuses on Ti-Jeanne, a young woman and new mother in a burnt-out Toronto who's forced to take both human evil and supernatural forces when the father of her baby throws in his lot with a crime lord attempting to obtain a human heart for a transplant. Ti-Jeanne and most of the main characters are all of African-Carribean descent, which is a really refreshing change from most extremely white SF and fantasy worlds. The characters are all believable and well-drawn, and the story mixes science fictional/post-apocalyptic elements with African-Carribean religious traditions in a compelling way. The story itself is a real nail-biter, and the climactic confrontation between Ti-Jeanne and the crime lord Rudy was tense enough to make me miss my subway stop. It was also a bit of a kick to see my city, or a post-collapse doppelganger of it, anyway, show up in a novel. I'm now very much looking forward to reading more of Hopkinson's writing.