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The Dew Breaker Hardcover – Deckle Edge, March 9, 2004
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We meet him late in his life. He is a quiet man, a husband and father, a hardworking barber, a kindly landlord to the men who live in a basement apartment in his home. He is a fixture in his Brooklyn neighborhood, recognizable by the terrifying scar on his face. As the book unfolds, moving seamlessly between Haiti in the 1960s and New York City today, we enter the lives of those around him: his devoted wife and rebellious daughter; his sometimes unsuspecting, sometimes apprehensive neighbors, tenants, and clients. And we meet some of his victims.
In the book’s powerful denouement, we return to the Haiti of the dew breaker’s past, to his last, desperate act of violence, and to his first encounter with the woman who will offer him a form of redemption—albeit imperfect—that will change him forever.
The Dew Breaker is a book of interconnected lives—a book of love, remorse, and hope; of rebellions both personal and political; of the compromises we often make in order to move beyond the most intimate brushes with history. Unforgettable, deeply resonant, The Dew Breaker proves once more that in Edwidge Danticat we have a major American writer.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication dateMarch 9, 2004
- Dimensions5.88 x 0.93 x 8.67 inches
- ISBN-101400041147
- ISBN-13978-1400041145
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“[The Dew Breaker] never wavers in placing its attention on individual lives, and as [Danticat] moves from one character to another you feel she is holding their faces up to you . . . [An] accomplished novel.” –Jenny Shank, Rocky Mountain News
“[Danticat’s] prose is at once stately and riveting, echoing sincere grief for Haiti’s plight and capturing the intensity of violent times.” –Jeannette J. Lee, Associated Press
“Filled with quiet intensity and elegant, thought-provoking prose . . . An elegiac and powerful novel with a fresh presentation of evil and the healing potential of forgiveness.” –Champ Clark, People
“[Danticat’s] writing . . . transcends its subject matter in moments of harsh poetry . . . Though Haiti’s violent history is rarely far from the surface of Danticat’s work, she also celebrates its vibrancy . . . there’s an intimacy to [her] writing.” –Associated Press
“Perfectly formed chapters written in prose that feels like blood moving slowly through veins . . . Startling.” –Joy Press, Village Voice
“With her grace and her imperishable humanity, her devotion to lives lived like ‘a pendulum between forgiveness and regret,’ [Danticat] . . . makes sadness beautiful.” –Daniel Asa Rose, The New York Observer
“The stories relate to one another like beautiful shards of a broken vase . . . Haunting . . . A flawless finale . . . [Danticat] is a master at capturing the inarticulate sorrow and bafflement that evil inspires.” –Ron Charles, Christian Science Monitor
“[The Dew Breaker] delivers the pleasures of intricacy . . . Danticat has an emotional imagination capable of evoking empathy for both predator and prey.” –Troy Patterson, Entertainment Weekly
“In its varied characters, its descriptive power and its tightly linked images and themes, [The Dew Breaker] is a rewarding and affecting read, rich with insights not just about Haiti but also about the human condition.” –Kate Washington, San Francisco Chronicle
“With characteristic lyricism and grace, Danticat probes the painful legacy of [Haiti's past] . . . [She] allows her deft, impressionistic strokes to evoke the many different lives shattered by each act of violence.” –Heather Hewett, Philadelphia Inquirer
“Stunning . . . Engrossing for its fine-tuned characterizations and evocative interactions . . . Vivid and memorable . . . Always shifting and always beautiful, the stories maintain a sense of mystery about what lies behind them.” –Johnette Rodriguez, The Providence Phoenix
“A compelling portrait of individuals untied against their will, even without their knowledge, by pain, trauma, and loss . . . A collection of perspectives that, together, give a snapshot of a community struggling to get out from under tragedy.” –Rick Massimo, Providence Journal
“Danticat’s prose . . . is lucid, precise from start to finish . . . A singular vision of what a novel is capable of achieving and the depths to which it can pull us.” –Kevin Rabalais, Times-Picayune
“Stunning . . . Beautifully written fiction [that] seamlessly blend[s] the personal and political, [and] asks questions about shame and guilt, forgiveness and redemption, and the legacy of violence . . . haunting.” –Bob Minzesheimer, USA Today
“Danticat [is] surely one of contemporary fiction’s most sensitive conveyors of hope’s bittersweet persistence in the midst of poverty and violence.” –Margaria Fichtner, Miami Herald (feature)
“Moving . . . An emotionally rigorous story told with wit and occasional humor by one of our greatest living writers.” –Nader Sadre, Gotham
“Danticat writes finely crafted, hauntingly evocative books. [The Dew Breaker] probes the shadows of the Haitian diaspora in all its complexity.” –Anderson Tepper, Time Out New York
“Unforgettable . . . Danticat masterfully leads her readers into the everyday lives of Haitian immigrants in Brooklyn and Queens, New York . . . This heart-stirring book teaches us profound truths about the power of the human spirit.”–Organic Style
“Breathtaking . . . With terrifying wit and flowered pungency, Edwidge Danticat has managed over the past 10 years to portray the torment of the Haitian people . . . In The Dew Breaker, Danticat has written a Haitian truth: prisoners all, even the jailers.” –Richard Eder, New York Times Book Review
“A tangle of history, biography, circumstance and chance forms the emotional backdrop of Edwidge Danticat’s luminous new novel, The Dew Breaker . . . A tale of crime and punishment in the great tradition of Dostoevsky.” –Glenn McNatt, The Sun
“Violence and politics haunt The Dew Breaker . . . [The dew breaker's] moral ambiguities seem, at times, to be purely psychological, but Haiti’s vicious politics are at their core.” –New York magazine
“Remarkable . . . Danticat’s most persuasive, organic performance yet. As seamless as it is compelling . . . It is a measure of Danticat’s fierce, elliptical artistry that she makes the elisions count as much as her piercing, indelible words.” –Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
“Danticat’s gift is to combine both sympathy and clarity in a moral tangle that becomes as tight as a Haitian community. . . Moving.” –Pico Iyer, Time
“A devastating story of love, delusion, and history . . . Searing.” –Elaina Richardson, O magazine
“Riveting . . . Like a young Cassandra, gifted with the sight whether she wants it or not . . . Danticat leads her readers into the underworld. It’s furnished like home. ” –Kai Maristed, Los Angeles Times
“The Dew Breaker is a captivating, eloquent tale told by a nimble storyteller.” –Daphne Uviller, Newsday
“[The Dew Breaker tells of] ‘men and women whose tremendous agonies fill every blank space in their lives’ . . . It also is a vivid document of recent Haitian and Haitian-American history . . . The scenes are memorable, cinematic.” –Betsy Willeford, Miami Herald
“[A] mesmerizing tale of redemption and regret.”–Essence
“Masterful . . . Danticat’s challenging novel draws readers deep into Haiti’s dark past, causing us to question our notions of good and evil and the limits of redemption.” –Bernadette Adams David, Bookpage
“[Danticat] fuses the beauty and tragedy of her native land, a land her characters want to forget and remember all at once.” –Ebony
“Haitian-born Danticat’s third novel focuses on the lives affected by a ‘dew breaker,’ or torturer of Haitian dissidents under Duvalier’s regime. Each chapter reveals the titular man from another viewpoint . . . This structure allows Danticat to move easily back and forth in time and place, from 1967 Haiti to present-day Florida, tracking diverse threads within the larger narrative . . . The slow accumulation of details pinpointing the past’s effects on the present makes for powerful reading . . . and Danticat is a crafter of subtle, gorgeous sentences and scenes. As the novel circles around the dew breaker, moving toward final episodes in which, as a young man and already dreaming of escape to the U.S., he performs his terrible work, the impact on the reader hauntingly, ineluctably grows.” –Publishers Weekly
“[The Dew Breaker]is, most profoundly, about love’s healing powers. From its marvelous descriptions of place to the gentle opening up of characters, this is a book that engages the imagination.” –Amy Wilentz, Elle
“Compelling and richly imagined . . . The resonant theme of Danticat’s beautifully lucid fourth work of fiction is the baffling legacy of violence and the unanswerable questions of exile . . . The book’s pivotal, and most riveting, sections portray a man who works for the state as a torturer, or ‘dew breaker,’ until a catastrophic encounter with a heroic preacher induces him to flee to New York, where his daughter finally learns of his past. Danticat’s masterful depiction of the emotional and spiritual reverberations of tyranny and displacement reveals the intricate mesh of relationships that defines every life, and the burden of traumatic inheritances: the crimes and tragedies that one generation barely survives, the next must reconcile.” –Booklist (starred)
“[Danticat's] clear and resonant prose moves easily from past to present (and back again) . . . This tour de force will certainly earn Danticat high acclaim . . . Highly recommended.” –Library Journal (starred)
“In this third novel from Danticat, the past has a way of intruding on everyday life no matter how all of the characters try to stop it. The dew breaker at the heart of this story is an old man when we first meet him . . . each chapter brings another view of this same man, who escaped his crimes in Haiti to hide out in Brooklyn, and each is relat...
From the Inside Flap
We meet him late in his life. He is a quiet man, a husband and father, a hardworking barber, a kindly landlord to the men who live in a basement apartment in his home. He is a fixture in his Brooklyn neighborhood, recognizable by the terrifying scar on his face. As the book unfolds, moving seamlessly between Haiti in the 1960s and New York City today, we enter the lives of those around him: his devoted wife and rebellious daughter; his sometimes unsuspecting, sometimes apprehensive neighbors, tenants, and clients. And we meet some of his victims.
In the book?s powerful denouement, we return to the Haiti of the dew breaker?s past, to his last, desperate act of violence, and to his first encounter with the woman who will offer him a form of redemption?albeit imperfect?that will change him forever.
The Dew Breaker is a book of interconnected lives?a book of love, remorse, and hope; of rebellions both personal and political; of the compromises we often make in order to move beyond the most intimate brushes with history. Unforgettable, deeply resonant, The Dew Breaker proves once more that in Edwidge Danticat we have a major American writer.
About the Author
From The Washington Post
On January 1, 1804, Haiti became an independent nation. Its citizens, however, have yet to find themselves in a land that is truly free. Over the last two centuries, coups, massacres and dictators have emptied the country's coffers and inflicted unspeakable violence upon its people. With the recent resignation -- be it by choice or by force -- of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and the presence of rebel forces, political stability still seems to be a long way off. For the Haitian characters in The Dew Breaker, any hopeful dreams for the future are compromised, if not completely eclipsed, by the nightmares of their past.
This courageous book, composed of nine interrelated short stories, is about recognition and redemption. It addresses the fraught question of how to repair or reclaim lives destroyed by one man's violent career." That man is a former shoukèt laroze, a "dew breaker," one of the government's henchmen, so named because of the time of day when they usually capture their victims. In the opening story, "The Book of the Dead," we meet Ka Bienaimé, a sculptor whose only subject is her father, a solitary man prone to deep silences that she attributes to the year he spent in prison. Ka has just sold her first completed sculpture, and her father has traveled with her to Tampa from their home in Brooklyn so that she can personally deliver the piece to its new owner, a famous Haitian-born television actress. Before the transfer can take place, her father sneaks out of the hotel room with the mahogany figure and tosses it into a lake. He later explains to Ka that he does not deserve such an honor, that he was not in prison as the prey but worked in it as the hunter, in which capacity he killed numerous people.
This admission prompts Ka to re-examine all the assumptions she had once made about her father. "I had always thought that my father's only ordeal was that he'd left his country and moved to a place where everything from the climate to the language was so unlike his own, a place where he never quite seemed to fit in, never appeared to belong. The only thing I can grasp now, as I drive way beyond the speed limit down yet another highway, is why the unfamiliar might have been so comforting, rather than distressing, to my father. And why he has never wanted the person he was, is, permanently documented in any way."
The face of evil is not easily forgotten. Despite her father's efforts to carve out a quiet existence nearly three decades and a vast ocean away from the scene of his crimes, he is far from anonymous. There are many Haitian immigrants living in the dew breaker's Brooklyn neighborhood, many people for whom the mere sight of him can trigger memories of loss, of murdered relatives and endless grief. Edwidge Danticat, who came to America from Haiti at the age of 12, takes us, story by story, into their worlds and exposes those wounds. She is a master at creating community on the page, finding the casual ways that one life would naturally intersect with another. (Disclosure: Though I do not know Danticat, I have had two professional interactions with her: I republished her work in anthologies that I edited.)
In "The Bridal Seamstress," a spinster who has recently retired admits that the dew breaker is the real reason behind her sudden decision to close down her business. " 'He asked me to go dancing with him one night,' Beatrice said, putting her feet back in her sandals. 'I had a boyfriend, so I said no. That's why he arrested me. He tied me to some type of rack in the prison and whipped the bottom of my feet until they bled. Then he made me walk home, barefoot. On tar roads. In the hot sun. At high noon. This man, wherever I rent or buy a house in this city, I find him, living on my street.' "
We discover that there are three young men renting rooms in the basement of the dew breaker's two-story house -- Dany, Michel and a third, who in a more light-hearted story, "Seven," is preparing for the arrival of his wife, whom he has not seen since the morning after their one-night honeymoon, when he boarded a plane for New York with his suitcases and the promise that he would soon send for her. When we meet Dany again, in "Night Talkers," he is in Haiti visiting his aunt, the only remaining member of his family, because he has news that he wants to give her in person:
"The man who killed his parents was now a barber in New York. He had a wife and a grown daughter, who visited often. Some guys from work had told him that a barber was renting a room in the basement of his house. When he went to the barbershop to ask about the room, he recognized the barber as the man who had waved the gun at him outside his parents' house."
The title story transports readers back to the last days of François Duvalier, to the dew breaker's final, lurid act of torture and to the unlikely meeting between him and the woman whose fateful presence offers him the hope of forgiveness.
As with her earlier fiction, Danticat's writing in The Dew Breaker is well-crafted and imbued with imagery. Even a description of something as ordinary as hair becomes a symbol of a character's internal turmoil: "Beatrice had unbraided her cornrows so that her hair, now high and thick, looked like an angry cloud, a swollen halo floating a few inches above her."
She delivers her most beautiful and arresting prose when describing the most brutal atrocities and their emotional aftermath. In Danticat's hands, pain becomes poetry as a preacher is dragged to the torture chamber of a Haitian jail. He feels his sense of self being left behind, "with bits of his flesh in the ground, morsel by morsel being scraped off by pebbles, rocks, tiny bottle shards, and cracks in the concrete." In reconstructing such specific and personal memories of a brutal political past, Danticat awakens us to the beauty and terror that can exist in everyday life in Haiti. The Dew Breaker is a brilliant book, undoubtedly the best one yet by an enormously talented writer.
Reviewed by Meri Nana-Ama Danquah
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
My father is gone. I’m slouched in a cast-aluminum chair across from two men, one the manager of the hotel where we’re staying and the other a policeman. They’re both waiting for me to explain what’s become of him, my father.
The hotel manager—mr. flavio salinas, the plaque on his office door reads—has the most striking pair of chartreuse eyes I’ve ever seen on a man with an island Spanish lilt to his voice.
The police officer, Officer Bo, is a baby-faced, short, white Floridian with a potbelly.
“Where are you and your daddy from, Ms. Bienaimé?” Officer Bo asks, doing the best he can with my last name. He does such a lousy job that, even though he and I and Salinas are the only people in Salinas’ office, at first I think he’s talking to someone else.
I was born and raised in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, and have never even been to my parents’ birthplace. Still, I answer “Haiti” because it is one more thing I’ve always longed to have in common with my parents.
Officer Bo plows forward with, “You all the way down here in Lakeland from Haiti?”
“We live in New York,” I say. “We were on our way to Tampa.”
“To do what?” Officer Bo continues. “Visit?”
“To deliver a sculpture,” I say. “I’m an artist, a sculptor.”
I’m really not an artist, not in the way I’d like to be. I’m more of an obsessive wood-carver with a single subject thus far—my father.
My creative eye finds Manager Salinas’ office gaudy. The walls are covered with orange-and-green wallpaper, briefly interrupted by a giant gold leaf–bordered print of a Victorian cottage that resembles the building we’re in.
Patting his light green tie, which brings out even more the hallucinatory shade of his eyes, Manager Salinas reassuringly tells me, “Officer Bo and I will do our best.”
We start out with a brief description of my father: “Sixty-five, five feet eight inches, one hundred and eighty pounds, with a widow’s peak, thinning salt-and-pepper hair, and velvet-brown eyes—”
“Velvet?” Officer Bo interrupts.
“Deep brown, same color as his complexion,” I explain.
My father has had partial frontal dentures since he fell off his and my mother’s bed and landed on his face ten years ago when he was having one of his prison nightmares. I mention that too. Just the dentures, not the nightmares. I also bring up the blunt, ropelike scar that runs from my father’s right cheek down to the corner of his mouth, the only visible reminder of the year he spent in prison in Haiti.
“Please don’t be offended by what I’m about to ask,” Officer Bo says. “I deal with an older population here, and this is something that comes up a lot when they go missing. Does your daddy have any kind of mental illness, senility?”
I reply, “No, he’s not senile.”
“You have any pictures of your daddy?” Officer Bo asks.
My father has never liked having his picture taken. We have only a few of him at home, some awkward shots at my different school graduations, with him standing between my mother and me, his hand covering his scar. I had hoped to take some pictures of him on this trip, but he hadn’t let me. At one of the rest stops I bought a disposable camera and pointed it at him anyway. As usual, he protested, covering his face with both hands like a little boy protecting his cheeks from a slap. He didn’t want any more pictures taken of him for the rest of his life, he said, he was feeling too ugly.
“That’s too bad,” Officer Bo offers at the end of my too lengthy explanation. “He speaks English, your daddy? Can he ask for directions, et cetera?”
“Yes,” I say.
“Is there anything that might make your father run away from you, particularly here in Lakeland?” Manager Salinas asks. “Did you two have a fight?”
I had never tried to tell my father’s story in words before now, but my first completed sculpture of him was the reason for our trip: a three-foot mahogany figure of my father naked, kneeling on a half-foot-square base, his back arched like the curve of a crescent moon, his downcast eyes fixed on his very long fingers and the large palms of his hands. It was hardly revolutionary, rough and not too detailed, minimalist at best, but it was my favorite of all my attempted representations of my father. It was the way I had imagined him in prison.
The last time I had seen my father? The previous night, before falling asleep. When we pulled our rental car into the hotel’s hedge-bordered parking lot, it was almost midnight. All the restaurants in the area were closed. There was nothing to do but shower and go to bed.
“It’s like paradise here,” my father had said when he’d seen our tiny room. It had the same orange-and-green wallpaper as Salinas’ office, and the plush emerald carpet matched the walls. “Look, Ka,” he said, his deep, raspy voice muted with exhaustion, “the carpet is like grass under our feet.”
He’d picked the bed closest to the bathroom, removed the top of his gray jogging suit, and unpacked his toiletries. Soon after, I heard him humming loudly, as he always did, in the shower.
I checked on the sculpture, just felt it a little bit through the bubble padding and carton wrapping to make sure it was still whole. I’d used a piece of mahogany that was naturally flawed, with a few superficial cracks along what was now the back. I’d thought these cracks beautiful and had made no effort to sand or polish them away, as they seemed like the wood’s own scars, like the one my father had on his face. But I was also a little worried about the cracks. Would they seem amateurish and unintentional, like a mistake? Could the wood come apart with simple movements or with age? Would the client be satisfied?
I closed my eyes and tried to picture the client to whom I was delivering the sculpture: Gabrielle Fonteneau, a Hai- tian American woman about my age, the star of a popular television series and an avid art collector. My friend Céline Benoit, a former colleague at the junior high school where I’m a substitute art teacher, had grown up with Gabrielle Fonteneau in Tampa and on a holiday visit home had shown Gabrielle Fonteneau a snapshot of my Father piece and had persuaded her to buy it.
Gabrielle Fonteneau was spending the week away from Hollywood at her parents’ house in Tampa. I took some time off, and both my mother and I figured that my father, who watched a lot of television, both at home and at his Nostrand Avenue barbershop, would enjoy meeting Gabrielle Fonteneau too. But when I woke up, my father was gone and so was the sculpture.
I stepped out of the room and onto the balcony overlooking the parking lot. It was a hot and muggy morn- ing, the humid air laden with the smell of the freshly mowed tropical grass and sprinkler-showered hibiscus bordering the parking lot. My rental car too was gone. I hoped my father was driving around trying to find us some breakfast and would explain when he got back why he’d taken the sculpture with him, so I got dressed and waited. I watched a half hour of local morning news, smoked five mentholated cigarettes even though we were in a nonsmoking room, and waited some more.
All that waiting took two hours, and I felt guilty for having held back so long before going to the front desk to ask, “Have you seen my father?”
I feel Officer Bo’s fingers gently stroking my wrist, perhaps to tell me to stop talking. Up close Officer Bo smells like fried eggs and gasoline, like breakfast at the Amoco.
“I’ll put the word out with the other boys,” he says. “Salinas here will be in his office. Why don’t you go on back to your hotel room in case your daddy shows up there?”
Back in the room, I lie in my father’s unmade bed. The sheets smell like his cologne, an odd mix of lavender and lime that I’ve always thought too pungent, but that he likes nonetheless.
I jump up when I hear the click from the electronic key in the door. It’s the maid. She’s a young Cuban woman who is overly polite, making up for her lack of English with deferential gestures: a great big smile, a nod, even a bow as she backs out of the room. She reminds me of my mother when she has to work on non-Haitian clients at her beauty shop, how she pays much more attention to those clients, forcing herself to laugh at jokes she barely understands and smiling at insults she doesn’t quite grasp, all to avoid being forced into a conversation, knowing she couldn’t hold up her end very well.
It’s almost noon when I pick up the phone and call my mother at the salon. One of her employees tells me that she’s not yet returned from the Mass she attends every day. After the Mass, if she has clients waiting, she’ll walk the twenty blocks from the church to the salon. If she has no appointments, then she’ll let her workers handle the walk-ins and go home for lunch. This was as close to retirement as my mother would ever come. This routine was her dream when she first started the shop. She had always wanted a life with room for daily Mass and long walks and the option of sometimes not going to work.
I call my parents’ house. My mother isn’t there either, so I leave the hotel number on the machine.
“Please call as soon as you can, Manman,” I say. “It’s about Papa.”
It’s early afternoon when my mother calls back, her voice cracking with worry. I had been sittin...
Product details
- Publisher : Knopf
- Publication date : March 9, 2004
- Edition : First Edition
- Language : English
- Print length : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1400041147
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400041145
- Item Weight : 15.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.88 x 0.93 x 8.67 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,188,599 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #13,558 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Edwidge Danticat was born in Haiti in 1969 and came to the United States when she was twelve years old. She graduated from Barnard College and received an M.F.A. from Brown University. She made an auspicious debut with her first novel, Breath, Eyes, Memory, and followed it with the story collection Krik? Krak!, whose National Book Award nomination made Danticat the youngest nominee ever. She lives in New York.
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Customers praise the book's storytelling, noting how the stories are interwoven and creating characters with depth. Moreover, the writing style receives positive feedback, with one customer highlighting its poetic brilliance. Additionally, customers find the book lovely and honest in its portrayal. However, the pacing receives mixed reactions, with one customer mentioning feelings of dread lingering after reading.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the storytelling in the book, with its interwoven narratives and riveting plot.
"Great stories!" Read more
"The story is very interesting and so gripping that I could put it down!!!..." Read more
"Beautiful, lambent prose, compassion for Haiti's dilemma, and riveting plot keep readers engaged in this very lovely, heart aching story." Read more
"...Edwidge tells great stories. Makes you feel you are right in the middle of it." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and interesting to read.
"This was a great read and very interesting. I didn’t know much about Haiti and I appreciate this author’s ability to take me there...." Read more
"Not bad. A good read if your into adultery and torture and the mentally ill...." Read more
"This seller was fast with shipping! The book is a great read" Read more
"Fabulous weaving of stories into a good solid read - pure artistry and soulful exploration." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, describing it as wonderful, with one customer noting its poetic brilliance.
"Wonderfully written. Edwidge Danticat delivers the "pwen" to all of us "blan"." Read more
"...Beautifully written, the chapters overlap and wind back around each other as the novel slowly reveals the ghosts of the past within the culture's..." Read more
"This book was beautifully written, but much to confusing for an enjoyable read." Read more
"...Tales of brutality and resilience . Wonderful writing that will keep you hooked from beginning to end." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with one review noting how even the most evil characters become human.
"...draws the reader in and amazes while making even the most evil of characters become human and believable...." Read more
"...She weaves this story with twists and turns and has a special way of drawing her characters...." Read more
"...off quite confusing but is very colorful and does a great job of incorporating characters despite chapters not being in chronological order...." Read more
"Characters are largely unsympathetic and unlikeable, writing isn’t very interesting, I would not have read this if I didn’t have to for school." Read more
Customers find the book very lovely.
"Beautiful book" Read more
"...A beautiful book set in a place of time of terrible events that aren't often recorded." Read more
"Beautiful, lambent prose, compassion for Haiti's dilemma, and riveting plot keep readers engaged in this very lovely, heart aching story." Read more
"...Everything else was pretty eh. I probably won't read it again, but I don't 100% regret having had to read it." Read more
Customers appreciate the honest portrayal of the book.
"Incredibly sensitive and honest portrayal of one of the darkest times in Haitian history...." Read more
"...while making even the most evil of characters become human and believable...." Read more
"Amazingly realistic book..." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book disturbing, with one customer noting that feelings of dread linger after reading, while another mentions that much of the book is melancholy.
"...whole thing because it was fairly difficult to read and it was really disturbing." Read more
"...It's a heavy topic, and much of the book is melancholy and even gloomy--but Danticat is expert at throwing in both comic relief and the perfectly..." Read more
"...Feelings of dread lingers after reading." Read more
"...Everything was bearable except for the adultery, that almost made me put the book down forever but alas, I had to read it for class...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2011Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe cycle of nine stories that make up "The Dew Breaker" revolves around the central character that haunts all of them: a loving father and husband living in New York who was once a member of the Tontons Macoute, paramilitary torturers during Francois Duvalier's despotic regime in Haiti. Only three of the stories deal directly with this man and his family, but the other six deal with his victims, their families, or their friends. Although I often feel that stories-as-a-novel (or fix-ups) are not convincing--the distraction of the seams can sometimes overpower the whole--this is an exception: if anything, the jigsaw-puzzle approach more powerfully shows how disparate lives have been shattered by one "evil" man.
It's a heavy topic, and much of the book is melancholy and even gloomy--but Danticat is expert at throwing in both comic relief and the perfectly placed awkward moment. All nine stories are superb, but even so there are four the truly stand out. The opening story, "The Book of the Dead," describes a semi-vacation trip to Florida taken by the now-elderly man and his daughter, Ka, who has sold a sculpture based her father's image to a famous Haitian American actress. When the father (with the artwork) disappears, secrets are revealed, Ka's adoration of her father is tested, and the obligatory meeting with the actress is both uncomfortable and unforgettable. In "Seven," an immigrant living with two bachelors in a basement apartment gets ready to receive the wife he hasn't seen in seven years. (One of his initial concerns: his apartment-mates need to stop sitting around in their underwear.)
My favorite section, "The Bridal Seamstress," features Aline, a young, idealistic journalism intern who interviews a woman who is about to retire from a career making bridal dresses for other Haitian immigrants ("they come here carrying photographs of tall, skinny girls in dresses that cost thousands of dollars. . . . It's part of my job to tell them, without making them cry, that they're too short, too wide, or too pregnant . . ."). The story turns darker when the older woman describes the new neighbor who, she claims, is the man who tortured her in Haiti. And, the longest and final story, "The Dew Breaker," takes us back to 1967, when the man who will be the cause of so many future nightmares conducts his last murderous assignment in Haiti, and then takes us forward to 2004, with the story of the woman who saved, forgave, and (if such a thing is possible) redeemed him.
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2022Format: KindleVerified PurchaseFrom the evil and dysfunction of Haiti, this novel tells a story from the perspective of related characters derived from the crime or crimes committed by one man, an officer of the Haitian government who immigrates to the United States, New York, and with his wife, begin a new life, harboring his secret past. The structure of the novel is superbly handled, the story is well imagined, and the writing is tight and confident. A novel about the murderous actions of a single character and their consequences from an ensemble of related characters comes together nicely. Feelings of dread lingers after reading.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2021Format: KindleVerified PurchaseA collection of stories intertwined in a genius tale. Danticat brings the story of Haitian people , history , language and culture to light . Tales of brutality and resilience . Wonderful writing that will keep you hooked from beginning to end.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2021Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis was the first book by Edwidge Danticat that I read many, many years ago. I felt the same way after finishing this reading that I felt all those years ago. WOW. I was hungry for more and am thoroughly enjoying this walk down memory lane.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2014Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseReasonably engaging. I bought to take with me on a trip to Haiti, didn't learn as much about the culture from this book as I thought I might. No complaints but wouldn't re-read it. I passed my copy on to a friend after finishing it. The author has a good writing style, no complaints about the pacing of the book, just felt the ending was too predictable.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2022Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseUna novela extraordinaria: tanto el modo en que Danticat urde la trama como su lenguaje son ejemplares. Una visión de Haití y una época que sobrevive en nuestra memoria.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2012Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe Dew Breaker
Not what you think it will be at first. Again, it is a lot of short stories that are all linked to one family and in particular one man who did something that he has to live with forever. He has been forgiven by his wife, but he can't forgive himself. Edwidge Danticat is one of my favorite authors. She brings you into her stories and makes you feel the intertwined stories along with her characters. Highly recommended.
Top reviews from other countries
Bob LinReviewed in Canada on February 4, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Great deal
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI needed the book for an English course, the shipping was prompt and the price was great (got it used). Maybe not the most interesting, but I'm satisfied with my purchase.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 4, 20165.0 out of 5 stars A MUST Read
This book is really good. I had to read it for one of modules this year and I enjoyed it far more than I was expecting I would.
It's a fascinating and compelling narrative about an aspect of history that is not talked about enough.
I loved the format of interconnecting short stories that don't tell the reader everything and allow us to build our own connections and get surprised as we read on.
Marcus TwainusReviewed in Germany on March 21, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Thank you Amazon.de
I have not read the book, BUT I will read it in the future as a book club selection.
The product had a good photo alongside its description. As always, the purchase went smoothly.
KateReviewed in France on April 20, 20135.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful, poignant novel
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseSimply but beautifully written, the story of Haiti over two generations seen in flashbacks through various characters' eyes. A truly magnificent achievement.
Linda L TatlerReviewed in Canada on September 5, 20145.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseGreat seervice






