Review:
In The Store of a Million Items, Jamaican-American writer Michelle Cliff writes about a childhood spent on two islands--Jamaica and Manhattan. Cliff examines the gaps between cultures, genders, and generations in each of these 11 succinct, lyrical tales. These stories contrast the abundance and racism of America during the 1950s and 1960s with life in Jamaica during the same period. In the title story, the narrator describes how the arrival of new products at the Store of a Million Items marked the changes of seasons for children in her New York neighborhood. Instead of spring, summer, winter, and fall, they had yo-yo season, water-gun season, and flexible-flyer season. In that story and in "Down the Shore," the author adeptly describes the secret worlds children inhabit. In "Contagious Melancholia" and "Stan's Speed Shop," Cliff examines people who are just plain different. "Stan's Speed Shop" is about an encounter between a crazy but harmless rich white man and a young black girl, who reflects that her family is packed with odd characters whose eccentricities are a product of their difficult lives: "We originated in the place where the sun never set and the blood never dried. Fragility was almost a point of honor, evidence of our delicacy against cruelty. Whatever happened, we weren't to blame, nor were we to make any change." Michelle Cliff's stories are not packed with action and plot, but they are full of fascinating, disappointed people and are told from a perspective that is both insightful and political. --Jill Marquis
About the Author:
Michelle Cliff is the Allen K. Smith Professor of English Language and Literature at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. She is the author of the novels Abeng, No Telephone to Heaven, and Free Enterprise, the collectiion Bodies of Water, and works of poetry and Criticism.
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