The Girl With the Golden Shoes

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Authors: Colin Channer

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MORE PRAISE FOR COLIN CHANNER

“Channer has become one of the most significant literary figures in the Caribbean, influencing writers in the islands and those living and working abroad.”

—Globe and Mail
(Canada)

For
T
HE
G
IRL
WITH THE
G
OLDEN
S
HOES

“Estrella is what her name implies/means. She lights up the pages of this extraordinary novella as she negotiates her youth and the characters who populate her island. The culture of class. The culture of love. The culture of race. The culture of gender. All conspire to change her—and they do, and they do, somewhat—but she impacts them also as she continues her trek toward her own resurrection. And what a resurrection she is!”

—Sonia Sanchez, author of
Shake Loose My Skin

“A wonderful, deceptively simple island odyssey evoking the will to survive, overcome, and succeed. A haunting book.”

—M.G. Vassanji, author of
The Book of Secrets

“Colin Channer is a graceful, natural storyteller with a keen eye and sharp ear. He effortlessly evokes the sense of a place and a people in strong yet subtle strokes. And Estrella is a magnificent heroine, a woman for her time. This is a captivating tale.”

—Diana Abu-Jaber, author of
Crescent


The Girl with the Golden Shoes
is lyrical, moving, beautifully constructed, and morally complex. In this novella, Colin Channer continues to expand the possibility of the Caribbean narrative and push the limits of his own oeuvre.”

—Chris Abani, author of
The Virgin of Flames

“Estrella Thompson is robust, durable, and sparkling on Colin Channer’s page—a girl trying to invent herself beyond her body…She invents herself in paper, in reading, in radio, in the modern. Channer’s literary prose is muscular and fluid, surreal and fabulous.”

—Dionne Brand, author of
What We All Long For

“Just start reading, and see if you can stop. Colin Channer’s prose is that hypnotic, vibrant, beautiful, startling, more alive than life itself.”

—Francisco Goldman, author of
The Divine Husband


The Girl with the Golden Shoes
is literary magic of the best kind. Each new character, each new sentence is deceptively simple, imbued with the same astonishing possibility as the best folktale. A sharp and relevant look at class and race, this book is one of the best I’ve read this year.”

—Joe Meno, author of
Office Girl
and
Hairstyles of the Damned

For
W
AITING
IN
V
AIN

“The love story is interesting, but not the most compelling element of the novel: What is most intriguing is the assurance of the voice, the strength of characterization, and the clear redefinition of the Caribbean novel—in which the discourses of post-colonialism have been usurped by the creative assurance of reggae’s aesthetic—a quintessentially modern aesthetic that has finally found the kind of dialogue between popular music and art that we have not seen in a long time.”

—Washington Post Book World

“Colin Channer believes fiction should ‘provide a cinematic experience for the mind.’
Waiting in Vain
is a vividly sophisticated story of love and deep desire set in lush Jamaica, London’s gritty Brixton, and frenetic New York.”

—Philadelphia Inquirer

“The hope and pain of loves lost and loves found are just some of the novel’s triumphs. This one just might become a best-seller.”

—Booklist

“Channer’s prose is infused with serious Caribbean lilt—the patois is perfectly rendered—and heavy, heavy love vibes.
Waiting in Vain
is what happens when a gifted writer decides to get romantic.”

—Time Out New York

“First novelist Channer reveals his characters’ idiosyncrasies in poetic description…The culture and backdrop are so finely scripted that readers will feel they are in Jamaica.”

—Library Journal

“Fire and Sylvia pursue and retreat from each other in convincingly soul-searching scenarios while Channer vividly describes urban New York, industrial Brixton, and rural Jamaica.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Channer is a writer endowed with a special gift of language; he possesses a painter’s eye…Like Jean Toomer, Channer knows how to tap the rhythm of the pastoral without becoming too somnolent; and unlike the traditional novels of the past,
Waiting in Vain
is a witty, contemporary book full of well-developed, believable characters.”

—Amsterdam News

“Caribbean in origin but global in vision, Colin Channer is Bob Marley with a pen instead of a Gibson guitar. In
Waiting in Vain
, we see an enviable and unusual achievement in the best writers—that delicate balance between poetic elegance, narrative momentum, and intellectual grace.”

—Kwame Dawes, award-winning author of
Bob Marley: Lyrical Genius

For
P
ASSING
T
HROUGH

“Channer is a gifted storyteller. He marshals the weighty themes of love, sex, race, class, and progress into an epic and vibrant narrative.”

—Washington Post

“A splendid collection by one of the Caribbean Diaspora’s finest writers. These tales are masterful distillations that teem with humor, with passion, with hope. Channer’s compassion never fails to amaze.”

—Junot Díaz, author of
Drown

“Colin Channer is a wonderfully funny, piercing, crafty, and compassionate writer, and
Passing Through
is a remarkable literary achievement. The stories bring with them the keen thrill of having discovered a truly fresh, original voice—Channer’s multiform vision of the Caribbean and the people who flow in and out of it is an exciting and even vital contribution to the world of the short story.”

—Dan Chaon, National Book Award finalist

“No one describes the wonders and aches of love as sensuously as Colin Channer, and Channer has no rival when it comes to capturing the rhythmic beauty of island patois on the page. In
Passing Through,
Channer’s silky prose is at its absolute finest; the stories are interwoven like a tapestry, a tapestry which scans across the panorama of Caribbean history to create an entirely new vocabulary of love, loss, and discovery.”

—ZZ Packer, PEN/Faulkner Award finalist

“Passing Through
takes you to the islands, into the nitty-gritty of being an islander, and the taste of being in the Caribbean. And Colin Channer’s smooth Jamaican rhythm comes through his sentences. If you can’t take a trip, take this as a little taste.”

—Touré, author of
The Promised Land

“Jumping into
Passing Through
, the third book by Jamaican-American author Colin Channer, is akin to visiting a foreign country and sampling its exotic cuisine and unique culture. It is an experience that teaches, entertains, and affirms the universality of our collective human experience. The communication of that shared experience, in all its perplexing, often disturbing beauty, is what Channer has clearly mastered here.”

—Virginian-Pilot

For
I
RON
B
ALLOONS

“The story comes at you with hurricane force and an irresistible title, ‘How to Beat a Child the Right and Proper Way.’ It is the creation of the Jamaican writer Colin Channer, who is also the editor of
Iron Balloons,
an anthology of a new kind of Jamaican writing…‘The Right and Proper Way’ is a big breath of a piece, fifty-four pages long, and something of a tour de force, spoken in various registers of Jamaican English.”

—New York Times

“The pick of the collection is Channer’s own contribution.

How to Beat a Child the Right and Proper Way’ is a hilariously digressive monologue delivered by a Jamaican woman to a class of mature students in the United States…At first she seems to be an interfering tyrant; but her moving tale unravels to show a sympathetic, contradictory person.”

—Times Literary Supplement
(UK)

“The ability to eloquently delineate a particular experience—Caribbean life—accounts in large part for the significance and success of
Iron Balloons
…The anthology offers some of today’s most prominent Caribbean writers, including Kwame Dawes, Elizabeth Nunez, and Channer himself, as well as such newcomers as Marlon James and Sharon Leach.”

—Toronto Star
(Canada)

“The stories share a focus on lushly drawn, believably human characters, while their settings and moods are pleasingly diverse.”

—Boston Herald

“Channer’s ‘How to Beat a Child the Right and Proper Way’ is a mesmerizing tale told in a sparkling vernacular.”

—Time Out Chicago

“Channer’s imagery is so vivid that the brutal whipping depicted in his story can almost be heard. But Channer allows the beater—a mother straddling the working- and middle-class worlds who is disciplining her rebellious teen daughter to save her from certain destruction—to gain sympathy as she considers class, skin color, and social standing in post-colonial Jamaica.”

—Philadelphia Inquirer

This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Published by Akashic Books. By arrangement with Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House Publishing Group.
The Girl with the Golden Shoes
was originally published in an earlier form as a section of
Passing Through,
stories by Colin Channer (One World/Ballantine).

©2004, 2007 Colin Channer
Afterword ©2007 Russell Banks

ISBN-13: 978-1-933354-26-2
ISBN-10: 1-933354-26-7
eisbn: 9781617752308
Library of Congress Control Number: 2006936536
All rights reserved

Second printing

Akashic Books
PO Box 1456
New York, NY 10009
[email protected]
www.akashicbooks.com

Also by Colin Channer

Waiting in Vain

I’m Still Waiting

(novella, in
Got to Be Real)

Satisfy My Soul

Passing Through

(stories)

Iron Balloons: Hit Fiction from
Jamaica’s Calabash Writer’s Workshop

(editor)

So Much Things to Say

(poems, coeditor with Kwame Dawes)

Kingston Noir

(editor)

For Addis and Makonnen

Contents

Title Page

Copyright Page

Acknowledgments

Chapter I.

Chapter II.

Chapter III.

Chapter IV.

Chapter V.

Chapter VI.

Chapter VII.

Chapter VIII.

Chapter IX.

Chapter X.

Chapter XI.

Chapter XII.

Chapter XIII.

Afterword

Acknowledgments

Special thanks are due to my children, Addis and Makonnen, my junior editorial and production assistants; to my editor and bredrin Johnny Temple of Akashic Books, who is practiced in the art of leaving a writer alone and the science of knowing how to suggest editorial changes with care and respect; to my agent Marie Brown, who has guided my career since the publication of my very first book in 1998; and to Russell Banks, whose
Book of Jamaica
made me want to be a writer in ways I didn’t understand before I read it in 1982, and who fully understands the heirloom value of his afterword, yet still agreed to entrust a part of his legacy as a writer, thinker, literary activist, and teacher to a clumsy apprentice like me.

Special thanks are also due to the writing community that sustains me, especially the members of that community who graciously agreed to publicly acknowledge their regard for this work.

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