Praise for Dionne Brand:
[Brand has] a lush and exuberant style that may put some readers in mind of Toni Morrison or Edwidge Danticat.
-The New York Times Book ReviewJoining such acclaimed Caribbean writers as Paule Marshall, Rosa Guy, Jamaica Kincaid and Maryse Conde is a new group of outstanding talents like Edwidge Danticat and Patrick Chamoiseau. One must add to that list Dionne Brand. At the Full and Change of the Moon, her second novel, is a hypnotically compelling, magical set of tales...The stories, fascinating, sad and sometimes horrific, are told in a densely rhythmic and haunting style that is also full of heartbreak and longing for things beyond the characters' grasp. . . . [an] unsettling and beautifully written novel. -Paula L. Woods, Los Angeles Times
Luminously written. . .haunting. -Emerge (Recommended Reading)
It is hard to describe, but there is a grave radiance inside this book. Step into its light. -Carole Maso
[An] ambitious and uncompromising meditation on the meaning of freedom and the power of memory. -The Boston Book Review
The language in these interlocking tales is as rhythmic as waves in the sea, sometimes incantory: dreamlike or nightmarish...Ghosts may fill some of the rooms and wander along the shore, but what happens is all in the mind-mystical and mystifying, true and shadowed. Sometimes evocation is simply exquisite, as the depiction of the prostitute Maya sitting in her window in Amsterdam; other times, as the second Bola inhabits the old house in Trinidad with the ghost of her grandmother, it is terrifying. Fabulous in the deepest sense of the word. -Booklist
Impassioned, lyrical...a tactile history of brutal, beautiful images that flutter before the eye and ache against the skin. -Alberto Mobilio, The Village Voice Literary Supplement's Writers on the Verge
A distinguished, visionary work, grounded in the language and legacy of [Brand's] native Trinidad. Intricately structured and lyrically narrated...Brand seamlessly fuses individual and collective identities in a work of poetic achievement. -Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A powerful family saga, filled with passion and anguish . . . Brand renders [these] lives in rich, almost lyrical language, offering up a world filled with unique characters. -Library Journal (starred review)
[Dionne Brand] has a way of kneading language into shape, creating a prose-style which is effortlessly musical and wholly original. -The Times (London)
Dionne Brand's luscious new novel features an African-American Eve whose children leave Trinidad to travel all over the world, their lives weaving around one another in brilliant strands. . . . A delicately structured, beautifully written novel infused with rare emotional clarity. -The Independent (London)
Rich, elegiac, almost biblical in its rhythms . . . One of the essential works of our times . . . The authority with which Brand sinks into these lives, assuming their very different sensibilities, is astonishing. -Joan Thomas, The Globe & Mail (Toronto)
Sensuous ...wildly lyrical...wonderful...[It] pierces the imagination. -The Toronto Star
In its uses of imagistic language, the novel is reminiscent of Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient...Brand is an elegant writer...Richly textured and haunting. -Irene D'souza, Winnipeg Free Press
Brand draws us into a fierce, incendiary plantation world, a lush dense revolutionary zone defined as much by insurrections and enclaves of escaped slaves as by its vast white-owned plantations. . . . Through the sheer force of her imagination, [Dionne Brand] will an obscured black history back to life. -The Gazette (Montreal)