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Patsy: A Novel Hardcover – June 4, 2019
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Best Books of 2019: Washington Post • O, The Oprah Magazine • Time • NPR • People • Buzzfeed
A TODAY Show #ReadWithJenna Book Club Selection
Winner • Lambda Literary Award [Lesbian Fiction]
A Washington Post Lily Lit Club Selection
Longlisted • PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction
American Library Association • A Barbara Gittings Literature Award Honor Book (Stonewall Book Awards)
Finalist • Aspen Words Literary Prize
Apple Books • Best Books of the Month
New York Times Book Review • Editors’ Choice Selection
Kirkus Reviews • Most Memorable Fictional Families of 2019
Longlisted • The Morning News Tournament of Books
A Rumpus Book Club Selection
A beautifully layered portrait of motherhood, immigration, and the sacrifices we make in the name of love from award-winning novelist Nicole Dennis-Benn.
Heralded for writing “deeply memorable . . . women” (Jennifer Senior, New York Times), Nicole Dennis-Benn introduces readers to an unforgettable heroine for our times: the eponymous Patsy, who leaves her young daughter behind in Jamaica to follow Cicely, her oldest friend, to New York. Beating with the pulse of a long-withheld confession and peppered with lilting patois, Patsy gives voice to a woman who looks to America for the opportunity to love whomever she chooses, bravely putting herself first. But to survive as an undocumented immigrant, Patsy is forced to work as a nanny, while back in Jamaica her daughter, Tru, ironically struggles to understand why she was left behind. Greeted with international critical acclaim from readers who, at last, saw themselves represented in Patsy, this astonishing novel “fills a literary void with compassion, complexity and tenderness” (Joshunda Sanders, Time), offering up a vital portrait of the chasms between selfhood and motherhood, the American dream and reality.- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLiveright
- Publication dateJune 4, 2019
- Dimensions6.5 x 1.5 x 9.6 inches
- ISBN-101631495631
- ISBN-13978-1631495632
"When She Returned" by Lucinda Berry
One woman’s reappearance throws her family into turmoil, exposing dark secrets and the hidden, often devastating truth of family relationships.| Learn more
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From the Publisher
"Exquisite... The timely story of an undocumented immigrant straddling two worlds." – Jodi Picoult
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Editorial Reviews
Review
― Jenna Bush Hager, NBC's TODAY #ReadWithJenna Book Club Selection
"Nicole Dennis-Benn carefully unspools the stories behind each wound over the long course of this richly imagined novel... [she] beautifully illustrates how the characters are connected to one another by love, desire and violence, and how they bear those histories permanently, both within and on their bodies. [Patsy] continually and subtly defies predictability as it tells a vital and remarkable life story.... I never knew what turn the story would take next, how the past would reassert itself, what alliances and rifts would form, where love would fail and where it would unexpectedly appear. Again and again, Patsy surprises and illuminates."
― Chelsey Johnson, New York Times
"Sumptuous... Dennis-Benn ingeniously humanizes and changes up the typical immigrant saga... The result is a knowing, at times painfully funny novel about the disorienting relationship between selfhood and sacrifice."
― O, The Oprah Magazine
"Stunning…. Patsy fills a literary void with compassion, complexity and tenderness."
― Joshunda Sanders, TIME
"Admirers of Here Comes the Sun have waited three years for Dennis-Benn's followup, and anyone who was enchanted by her gorgeous writing are in for a happy surprise: Patsy isn't just as good as its predecessor, it's somehow even better.... Dennis-Benn isn't just a compassionate writer, she's also a courageous one, unafraid to address topics that too often go ignored. And in Patsy and Tru, she's managed to create two unforgettable characters who function as real people and not literary archetypes. Dennis-Benn is quickly becoming an indispensable novelist, and Patsy is a brave, brilliant triumph of a book."
― Michael Schaub, NPR
"Nicole Dennis-Benn’s sophomore novel, Patsy, methodically and unapologetically engages with choices women do and should be allowed to make, and as with her last novel, Here Comes the Sun, does so with nuance and grace.... Patsy is a deeply queer, sensitive and vividly written novel about a woman’s right to want and a child’s right to carve her own path."
― Ilana Masad, Washington Post
"Dennis-Benn writes about the immigrant experience with abiding, bone-deep empathy―swinging between standard English and patois the same way that Patsy and her daughter navigate their own need to code-switch as the years pass. Estranged from one another and bound to a world that tends to treat black womanhood and queer sexuality as invisible at best, their separate but intertwined stories wend through hurt and hope and inalienable dreams; not just for a better life, but a truly honest one."
― Leah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly
"Brilliant… [Dennis-Benn] writes with keen awareness of what others experience living undocumented in America―and the compromises that women make in order to prioritize themselves."
― Elle
"Dennis-Benn gives her characters the dose of happiness and self-assurance that many stories about social ills refuse women like them. She does that without facilely wishing away the big issues―racism, homophobia, gender, classism―that her novel tackles. Patsy is a portrait of black queer women grasping for self-determination, and a challenge to the conventions of what is expected of good mothers and good women and good immigrants.... In writing beautifully about that unending struggle, Dennis-Benn finds a way to extend to black girls and women some of the love that the world may never offer."
― Adrienne Green, The Atlantic
"While Patsy highlights the profound, and often unseen, sacrifices made in immigrants’ lives in America, it also emphasizes the struggles of those who are LGBTQIA+.... In the end, Dennis-Benn touches upon the question of whether or not America is even still the promised land for all identities seeking freedom from persecution."
― C.E. Miller, Bustle
"Patsy is a probing novel about freedom, examining one woman's shifting conception of it, and how people weigh what they are willing to trade for liberty.... The immigrant novel has a rich tradition in American literature.... Patsy adds to that lineage with its engrossing portrait of a complicated woman who struggles against crushing societal forces in her quest―not to sacrifice her life for future generations―but to finally unfurl her true self."
― Jenny Shank, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Astonishing.... Dennis-Benn’s writing is ravishing, full of the musical rhythm of Jamaican dialect, sprinkled like hot spices throughout a narrative that is colorful, heartbreakingly sad and bristling with life."
― Caroline Leavitt, San Francisco Chronicle
"[A] provocative, muscular book. Dennis-Benn takes care with characters, building intricate relationships, and writes in exquisite prose that brings to life Pennyfield, the Jamaican neighborhood Patsy is from, and the Caribbean diaspora in New York.... Draws the complexity of experiencing one’s sexuality, and the varying ways sexuality is understood in the larger community."
― Alexia Arthurs, Ms. Magazine
"Although she's lovingly drawn by Dennis-Benn, Patsy has done the single most-damning thing a mother can do in our society: She has abandoned her child. It's a marker of Dennis-Benn's masterful prowess at characterization and her elegant, nuanced writing that the people here―even when they're flawed or unlikable―inspire sympathy and respect. Dennis-Benn has written a profound book about sexuality, gender, race, and immigration that speaks to the contemporary moment through the figure of a woman alive with passion and regret."
― Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Dennis-Benn (Here Comes the Sun, 2016) builds big worlds inside and outside her touchable characters, writing through their knotty love in all its failures and mercies in this empathetic intergenerational epic of womanhood and inheritance.
"
― Annie Bostrom, Booklist (starred review)
"Redemptive parallel stories examine themes of identity, belonging, and self-fulfillment in Dennis-Benn’s (Here Comes the Sun) latest... Sharon Gordon beautifully captures the lilt of the many Jamaican voices as well as conveying the ambiguity of Patsy and Tru’s thoughts and feelings. This story may be better listened to than read. Highly recommended."
― Judy Murray, Library Journal (Audiobook, Starred)
"A Jamaican woman abandons her daughter for a chance to reunite with her childhood friend turned lover in this wrenching second novel from Dennis-Benn (Here Comes the Sun).... An immersive study in unintended consequences…. This is a marvelous novel."
― Publishers Weekly
"A stunningly powerful inter-generational novel about the price―the ransom really― women must pay to choose themselves, their lives, their value, their humanity. Frank, funny, salty, heartbreaking, full of love, Dennis-Benn is a map-maker to those places in the heart held so closely, the holder may not know even they’re there."
― Alexander Chee, author of How to Write an Autobiographical Novel
"Beautiful, shattering, and deeply affecting. Patsy’s story ultimately makes for a novel that is destined to endure."
― Chigozie Obioma, author of The Fishermen
"Nicole Dennis-Benn is an exquisite writer who paints scenes with words so vivid you might as well be walking through it as a character, not a reader. In Patsy, she addresses motherhood, sexuality, racism, and colorism; turning her prodigious talents to the timely story of an undocumented immigrant straddling two worlds while learning that love isn’t a choice, but the beat in one’s blood."
― Jodi Picoult, New York Times bestselling author of A Spark of Light and Small Great Things
"One of my favourite novels of 2017 was easily Nicole Dennis-Benn’s first novel, Here Comes the Sun, and when her second, Patsy, was announced, I almost lost my mind. The richness of Dennis-Benn’s writing is taken to another level in Patsy, the story of a Jamaican woman working towards her own version of the American dream.... Dennis-Benn explores in such a textured, taut way what in love is gained, and what, or who, is left behind.... Bliss."
― Candice Carty-Williams, author of Queenie: A Novel
"A novel that splits at the seams with yearning, elegantly written and deeply felt. Dennis-Benn leads the reader through Patsy's life with empathy and grace."
― Esme Weijun Wang, author of The Collected Schizophrenias
"An aching meditation on motherhood, sacrifice, and what it means to look truth in the face in order to fully become oneself. A beautiful book, as heartbreaking as it is restorative."
― Cristina Henriquez, author of The Book of Unknown Americans
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Liveright; First Edition (June 4, 2019)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1631495631
- ISBN-13 : 978-1631495632
- Item Weight : 1.5 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.5 x 9.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #409,625 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #374 in LGBTQ+ Literary Fiction (Books)
- #4,560 in Black & African American Women's Fiction (Books)
- #21,454 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Nicole Dennis-Benn is a Lambda Literary Award winner and New York Foundation for the Arts Artist Fellowship recipient. She's also a finalist for the 2016 John Leonard Prize National Book Critics Circle Award, the 2016 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, and the 2017 Young Lions Fiction Award for her debut novel, Here Comes the Sun— a New York Times Notable Book of the year, an NPR, Amazon, Barnes & Noble Best Book of 2016. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Elle, Electric Literature, Ebony, and the Feminist Wire. She was born and raised in Kingston, Jamaica, and lives with her wife in Brooklyn, New York.
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Felt incomplete throughout, confusing at times, and rushed at the end. The “political kisses” were unnecessary, and made me itch, but at least there were only a few.
I just couldn’t grasp the whole leaving your kid for 10 years, saying you couldn’t love her...until, what, you admitted your sexuality? Then you could? But yet, throughout, there is such guilt about the daughter...it just doesn’t ring true.
I can’t begin to understand why this woman and others wouldn’t try to find a way to stay legally, so they could send things home. I get it’s hard-but she doesn’t even try-while she beats herself up about leaving her daughter, who she “can’t love,” and about not sending her things...
She talks and talks about it, but never gives satisfying answers as to why she can’t or won’t go home, better herself, try to find a way to become legal—I know people in this situation, and this telling sells the situation so short. The attitude and total laziness instead of trying to keep to her word just makes me resent the main character.
The daughter’s story doesn’t feel real, either. I love how her story shows what living in Jamaica’s less-than-desirable neighborhoods might be like. As for Tru’s story, which should have much more detail, we go from sad little girl to very disturbed, self-mutilating young woman without enough insight as to how she unraveled more and more, as her mother stayed away. The author seems to try to point it all on the mom leaving, then on the sexuality, and on her being a bit of a social outcast-but it never comes together with a realistic, much less satisfying, explanation or conclusion.
Also, there are a few brief sentences here and there-such as one that says something about how the workers in the girls’ school have to “clean the menstrual blood off the girls’ toilets-“ sounds like a cheap way to get a little gasp. The lovemaking scenes, I get. Those other few-unrelated and annoying.
As a whole, ok, but too wordy in many parts, and I feel like what could’ve been a deep read about mother-daughter, sexuality, and a struggling immigrant, wrapped up too fast and too pretty and left me flat.
Many women leave their children to migrate, They feel they have no choice, and, sometimes they don't. They are running away from one kind of hardship or another. These left behind children are, in Jamaica, called 'barrel children'. They are left with family or friends; with promises from the mother to 'send money'. The mothers mostly do try, but when the barrels come, the 'so called 'fam/friend' gives their own children the best from the barrel, and the money sent goes, guess where. Many suffer all types of abuses. It is speculated that much of the violence in Jamaica is a result of boys without mothers (where are the fathers)! They are the lured into a life of violence. The gang becomes the family.
The novel seems preoccupied with sex. It is a rocky and dangerous road, when sex and its cousin love rule the head. Sense seem to disappear, leaving sorrow and regret, as Patsy learns.
I am a Jamaican woman, and a legal immigrant. I understand what Pasty went through. You have to be an immigrant to truly understand the painful loneliness of moving to a strange land and leaving family and all that is familiar behind. I came alone at 20 years old to NYC. Just thinking of it brings a pain. But, we stick it; we believe this life will be better. Sometimes, it is, sometimes, it is not : dreams quickly crumble under the weight of reality.
It is a good read, the dialect at times was distracting, but brought authenticity to the characters. A glossary for readers who many not know the dialect would have been helpful and perhaps expose the book to a wider audience. (there speaks a Librarian). Still, if needs be, one can go to search engine 'Bing' and get an explanation.
I hope the book sells nuff copies.
Thank you.
I loved that Patsy finally freed herself of guilt toward her daughter and tried to make peace. Patsy wasn't a good mother and I'm glad and relieved she realized that fact in making the right step in that direction.
The relationship between Patsy and Cicely was an interesting one. On the one hand, I could understand Cecily's reluctance in not renewing the budding relationship with Patsy. I understand she needed Marcus as cold and abusive as he was, to provide for her and their son and to maintain her new lifestyle.
I loved Marva's character and thought she was a Saint in taking care of another woman's child without notice. I have a difficult time in wondering why she stayed with her husband even after he cheated on her with Iris and had gotten a baby girl. I understand she was a housewife who probably had no means of making her own way financially. Nevertheless, she took care of her children and husband Roy, the police Sergeant quite admirably. I think he was also downright disrespectful to his faithful wife.
Tru, I sincerely hope Tru finds her way into the world and make herself happy, God knows she deserve it.
I love this book and will gladly recommend it to my friends.









