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Black Marks
 
 
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Black Marks [Paperback]

Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 1, 2006

“In this wonderfully intelligent novel, Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte explores a young woman’s complicated struggle to come to terms with her fractured past. Full of vivid characters and lovely sensual details, Black Marks transports its readers effortlessly between the many worlds Georgette inhabits. A splendid debut.” —Margot Livesey, author of Banishing Verona

Black Marks is an absorbing, highly imagined, and beautifully written novel. Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte rewards her readers with a brilliant interweaving of stories that capture a young woman’s movement into and out of different worlds as she searches for identity and attempts to make sense of her life.” —William Julius Wilson, author of The Declining Significance of Race

Black Marks is the story of Georgette Collins, who wakes up one day in her early thirties to discover she had no past. Everyone has had the experience of not quite fitting in at some point in their lives, but Georgette has grown up in between worlds: black and white, gay and straight, wealthy and working class, West Indian and American.

Throughout, Georgette tries to piece together these fractured worlds from her grandmother's stories and her own fragmented memories, but she cannot make sense of her experiences. Each reinvention of herself is more disastrous than the last. Now, Georgette, an African-American librarian, is completely isolated; she is floating, unable to make connections with family, friends, and colleagues. Many mornings she wakes to find a man in her bed with no idea how he got there. Days are spent in a self-created bubble, which both protects her and separates her from others.

The narrative weaves back and forth in time, through Georgette's childhood in Jamaica to her teenage immersion in Boston and New York nightlife, and into the reclusive silence of her adulthood, of the library. The story's ambiguities remind the reader that there are not always easy answers for why one person may suffer, and neither are there always identifiable paths to recovery. Although depression and sadness play major roles in Georgette's life, her first-person voice is intelligent, funny, and capable of both warmth and irony.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A young African-American artist's troubled, emotionally dislocated experience in Cambridge, Mass., and Jamaica comprises Hoyte's uneven, structurally disorienting debut. Georgette Collins is the product of wealthy, well-connected black parents in Cambridge, who divorce and send the youngster to her grandmother Nina's house in Kingston, Jamaica, for summer vacations in the early 1980s. Georgette learns patois and absorbs Nina's fabulous stories, while back in Boston she attends the all-girls' Ellis School, where she possesses the only Afro in a sea of smooth ponytails. Years later, after college at Harvard and coming out as a lesbian, Georgette works as a librarian at the Boston Public Library. Her ruptured narrative reveals a troubling (and fairly incredible) loss of memory: she awakens one day in her early 30s to discover she has "no past." Georgette embarks on an aimless chain of self-destructive behavior, such as sleeping with men she can't remember picking up and avoiding people at her job because of her "blank slate of... mind." Gradually, Hoyte fills in some gaps: her stint as the "kept woman" of a controlling rich white lover, Amanda, alcoholism and psychiatric counseling. Hoyte lays out a sympathetic catalogue of Georgette's painful struggles, but her narrator's memory loss makes for an awkward dramatization of feelings of alienation. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From the Back Cover

"Black Marks employs the techniques of the old-fashioned quest narrative in exploring the extremely complex circumstances of modern American life. Although there are no dragons to be confronted, Georgette Collins is forced to confront, within herself, class and racial tensions, sexual and cultural choices, in her attempt to better understand herself and to learn and claim the sacred 'true-true name' inherited from her Jamaican ancestors. This is a much-needed contribution to contemporary American fiction."
--James A. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Elbow Room

"Spiked with humor and expertly rendered . . . Delightful, authentic, wise and, complex, Black Marks is a vision of what it means to be completely human."
--Patricia Powell, author of The Pagoda

"In this wonderfully intelligent novel, Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte explores a young woman's complicated struggle to come to terms with her fractured past. Full of vivid characters and lovely sensual details, Black Marks transports its readers effortlessly between the many worlds Georgette inhabits. A splendid debut."
--Margot Livesey, author of Banishing Verona

"Black Marks is an absorbing, highly imagined, and beautifully written novel. Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte rewards her readers with a brilliant interweaving of stories that capture a young women's movement into and out of different worlds as she searches for identity and attempts to make sense of her life."
--William Julius Wilson, author of The Declining Significance of Race


Product Details

  • Paperback: 274 pages
  • Publisher: Akashic Books (February 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 188845184X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1888451849
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,849,943 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I thought I wouldn't be able to relate, but I liked it!, February 21, 2006
By 
This review is from: Black Marks (Paperback)
Kirsten Hoyte has got to be the world's most talented writer to have me relate to her tale of growing up between all kinds of worlds I know nothing about! Then again, I can't think of any young woman who doesn't need to discover who she is in light of everything that went into making her that way, and to find some sort of comfort and/or strength in that.

The main character, Georgette Collins, comes across as likable, even though she is scarcely able to present much of herself or to put her best foot forward, not remembering her past and therefore, not really knowing who she is now. I think that one way Ms. Hoyte manages to do this is by understating Georgie's dark, disturbing behaviors. While you know that she's mutilating herself, drinking too much and indulging in risky activites, it's not so much the focus of the story that you can't put it all aside to get the point--that Georgie needs help and she's going to have to get it for herself. In the struggle to find her name--her power--and recover her past, Georgie and her story become likable and relatable.

I also liked the way the story is told, all jumbled, fragmented and filled in, like Georgie's memories. Goes to show that things don't always have to function in a linear fashion in order to function. The story moves along just fine, and life goes on.

"Black Marks" is literature. A superb first effort! I look forward to more from Ms. Hoyte, and I hope she doesn't keep us waiting.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A MEMORABLE BOOK, February 15, 2006
By 
This review is from: Black Marks (Paperback)
This exceptional book is well-written with excellent character development. In addition, the unusual plot puts it in the "I couldn't put it down" category. kirsten's observations and insights relating to the culture of the black race in Boston and Jamaica and London's off-beat night life are detailed and profound and will interest any reader. I highly recommend it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars absorbing emotional portrait, January 13, 2007
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Concerned But Powerless "loqutous" (Mount Vernon, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Black Marks (Paperback)
The narrative style was very creative in this work. The author pushes the reader back and forth through time and centers different sections of the book around Georgette Collins giving her impressions and interactions with important people in her life from grandmother, lover, fiance to father.
The character's life is filled with love, excitement, passion, anger and boredom and all of this is painted with powerful description and dialogue. She cover's many social, political, racial and economic ideas, but not in a preachy way; the main character is multi-dimensional. She is an emotional woman with strong insight, intelligent and sensitive; her pain, sorrow and anger are profound and realistically porttrayed.
The ending left me satisfied and gave me an epiphany about what the character was trying to learn about herself by tracing through her life.
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