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A man lies in a newspaper-lined room dreaming an other life. Bob Marley's
spirit flew into him at the moment of the singer's death. A woman detaches
herself from her perfunctory husband and finds the erotic foreplay she longs
for in journeying round the island. A man climbs Blue Mountain Peak to fly and
hear the voice of God. Sonia paints her new friend Joan and hopes that this will
be the beginning of a sexual adventure.
Dawes's characters are driven by their need for intimate contact with people
and with God, and their need to construct personal myths powerful enough to
live by. In a host of distinctive and persuasive voices they tell stories that reveal
their inner lives and give an incisive portrayal of contemporary Jamaican society
that is unsparing in confronting its elements of misogyny and nihilistic violence.
Indeed several stories question how this disorder can be meaningfully told
without either sensationalism or despair. For Dawes, the answer is found in the
creative energies that lie just the other side of chaos. In particular, in the dub
vershan episodes, which intercut the stories, there are intense and moving
celebrations of moments of reggae creation in the studio and in performance.
Dawes has established a growing international reputation as a poet and these
are stories that combine a poetic imagination with narrative drive, an acute
social awareness and a deep inwardness in the treatment of character. In the
penultimate story, 'Marley's Ghost', Dawes's imagination soars to towering
myth.