In this docu-novel an unlikely relationship developed between an island man from Grenada and a Kansas woman in the 1950s. Both worked in Brooklyn and became casually acquainted until they vacationed at his familys modest cottage in rural Grenada. Though mesmerized by everything Grenadian, his guest experienced disquieting cultural shocks. Every experience, pleasant and unpleasant, she diligently recorded including details of their slow moving island-style romance. Driven to socially construct her multicultural family tree, their American-born granddaughter visited Grenada sixty years later. The flamboyant social life, intimacy and intense spicy aura captivated her and like her grandmother she too was inescapably Caribbeanized.
Dexter painfully listens to his fathers last words. I am dying a sad man . . . You have broken my heart. I always knew you were one of them. Even at eighteen, Dexter still has no clue as to what his father is talking about. He is puzzled why it feels like his father increasingly hates him no matter how hard he wants to please him. And why does his father keep calling him Nancy?
Dexter painfully listens to his fathers last words. I am dying a sad man . . . You have broken my heart. I always knew you were one of them. Even at eighteen, Dexter still has no clue as to what his father is talking about. He is puzzled why it feels like his father increasingly hates him no matter how hard he wants to please him. And why does his father keep calling him Nancy?
In this docu-novel an unlikely relationship developed between an island man from Grenada and a Kansas woman in the 1950s. Both worked in Brooklyn and became casually acquainted until they vacationed at his familys modest cottage in rural Grenada. Though mesmerized by everything Grenadian, his guest experienced disquieting cultural shocks. Every experience, pleasant and unpleasant, she diligently recorded including details of their slow moving island-style romance. Driven to socially construct her multicultural family tree, their American-born granddaughter visited Grenada sixty years later. The flamboyant social life, intimacy and intense spicy aura captivated her and like her grandmother she too was inescapably Caribbeanized.
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