363 reviews for:

Krik? Krak!

Edwidge Danticat

4.15 AVERAGE


This stellar author shows the reader the lives of Haitian women. I listened to these stories on Hoopla.

Some of these stories were beautiful and devastating, some of them were beautiful and uplifting. I really loved the last story - "Caroline's Wedding."

I am excited to read more from this author, and to learn more about Haiti.
dark reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Tragic and heartbreaking, beautifully written.

3.5
challenging dark emotional reflective sad fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: N/A
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Gorgeous language, passionate writing, immersive and beautiful characters. Uncool of her to be so young and writing so well when she came out with this book.

*Since this is a book of short stories, I’ll be giving a small synopsis and share my thoughts on each story.

Children of The Sea:

This is story of a boy and girl who love each other and end up separated during a time of political unrest. In order to communicate with each other they write imaginary letters to each other in order to stay connected to each other.

I enjoyed the pace of the story and switch of narratives. Even though the boy is at sea and the girl is at home, they keep each other in their thoughts and promise to never forget about each other. Though the letters won’t physically be sent, they act as a source of therapy for the two to get out their emotions on paper.

Nineteen Thirty-Seven:

A young woman/girl’s mom was accused of witchcraft and was sentenced to life in prison. The girl visits her mom in prison and struggles watching her wither away behind bars.

This one was so-so for me and I wasn’t 100% sure what was going on at some parts of the story. I noticed that there is symbolism in this story and the other used to represent themes such as the cruelties of Haitian life used throughout book. It speaks volumes about a mother’s love.

A Wall of Fire Rising:

I read this incredible powerful short story back in a college English class. It tells the story of a family that struggles to make ends meet. The main character Guy, has a son who has landed a lead role in the play. His son’s lines incite his father to chase his dreams.

This story says a lot about Haitian life as Guy feels trapped by the lack of finding a job, having food to feed his family. It’s very sad and as you read it you truly sympathize with his plight and sorrow.

Night Women:

A story about a woman and her son. She works as a “night woman” in order to provide for her son, all the while protecting him from the job she has in order to keep his childhood innocence.

A very short, but melancholy story. I know how hard this life must be for the mother and I admire her for the lengths she goes to in order to care for her son and give him the best life she can.

New York Day Women:

A woman trails her mother through the streets of Brooklyn. Her mother really isn’t the type to get dressed up and go out, so she wonders where her mother is traveling to.

I actually found this story to be a bit bland. It didn’t really grab my attention as much as the other stories and I it was just so-so. I felt a lack of connection to the story’s protagonist.

Caroline’s Wedding:

This was the longest story in this collection of stories. The protagonist’s younger sister (Caroline) is getting married, and the mother feels that she is losing Caroline as she is starting to break away from tradition.

One of my top favorite stories in this book! The long length of the story gave more time for me to get acquainted with the characters, and I felt like the plot was more developed. This is a good story that deals with the theme of tradition as well as the bond between mother and daughter.

Between The Pod and Gardenia:

A woman finds a baby along the road and decides to take it in and raise it as her own child.

This was probably the most heart-wrenching story in the book. Once the reader realizes what’s happening you deeply sympathize with the protagonist.

The Missing Peace:

A young teenage girl lives with her grandmothers in a boarding house during the war. Many foreigners pass through the area and one day an interesting woman ends up staying at the boarding house. She asks the young protagonist for help realizing the danger she might put them both in.

I don’t have too much to say on this story except for the fact that I enjoyed it. It had a mixture of suspense and drama.

Seeing Things Simply:

A young girl named Princesse gets the opportunity to be painted by a French artist named Catherine. Through the experience she not only learns about art but about life too.

A nice story that teaches you about the meaning behind art and that there is more to objects/people than meets the face. A picture says a thousand words.

Final Verdict:

Krik? Krak! is a wonderfully written collection of story of Danticat. Danticat knows how to weave together an excellent story with powerful characters that make an impact. I appreciated that she used a variety of characters (most of which are female) to offer the many perspectives of life in Haiti (and America). I learned a little more about Haiti’s background through reading this book and look forward more of Danticat’s works.

What a wonderful collection of short stories that weave into a larger narrative

This collection of interlinked short stories is a quick read, but the characters flitted in and out of my thoughts long after I set down the book. The hardships and tortures faced by these Haitian women across multiple generations seem almost unbelievable, they are so far from my experience. It is so easy to dismiss a whole country as a place of suffering and not see the people as individuals. Danticat's stories personalize Haiti and remind you that these horrors happen to ordinary people in the wrong place and wrong time. I would have liked a clearer picture of how some of the characters were related but that says more about me than it does about the writer, who was hailed as a young genius 15 years ago and I can see why. She shifts from allegory to straight-out narrative to an almost stream-of-conscious style and seems to find the right tone for each of her tales. I will never look at a newspaper article about Haiti the same way, and I think that is what the author intended.