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How would you feel coming home to find a family living in your house who call you Sarah, tell you your brother's name is Andy and insist that you should be ashamed of calling the police for help? My name is Rowena Shaw and I've never seen any of them before. They are total strangers. It's Thursday and it's just the beginning.
How would you feel if you came home to find a family living in your house who call you Sarah, tell you your brother's name is Andy and insist that you should be ashamed of calling the police for help? My name is Rowena Shaw and I've never seen any of them before. They are total strangers. It's Thursday and it's just the beginning.
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In this collection of poems, Sarah Lawson records her impressions of the towns and landscapes of the atmospheric island of Malta. She vividly describes Malta from St. Paul's Bay to Marsaxlokk, ranging in tone from a playful dialogue between ferries to an evocative meditation on the ancient city of Mdina. The island-nation is revealed in new and unexpected angles in these poems.
Sarah Lawson came back from a trip to Poland in 1980 never suspecting that for the rest of her life she would have an increasing connection with the country she had just visited as a tourist. Twenty-five years later in "The Ripple Effect" she looks back on the series of circumstances and encounters that resulted from an incident that seemed minor at the time but proved to be life-changing.
Glossary of names."--BOOK JACKET.
A study of Grace Nichols' writing that combines feminist and postcolonial reading strategies and places her work in both a Caribbean and black British context. It also shows how Nichols' poetry explored the boundaries of race, class and gender. It is aimed at students of literature in schools and in higher education.