Reviews tagging 'Sexism'

Pleasantview by Celeste Mohammed

2 reviews

carriepond's review

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dark reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Pleasantview is a novel in short stories set in a fictional town in Trinidad and Tobago called Pleasantview. Each of the stories works as standalone short stories, but characters from one story show up in others, creating an overall narrative that you might find in a traditional novel.

"Curled up, under her magical pony-and-rainbow sheets, she had prayed and prayed to fall asleep and wake up a boy. That way, she'd always belong to herself; other people might even belong to her."

"It wasn't scary and foggy no more. He was seeing a new road with black-and-white answers now. . . . Now he feel free . . . Now he had other people, the
real culprit-and-them, to hate."

The book summary says that "Pleasantview reveals the dark side of the Caribbean dream," and that it does. Definitely review trigger warnings for this title, because the book covers many heavy topics. But Celeste Mohammed handles it all so expertly, and the characters she creates really shine. I really loved seeing how each story would build on the next, and it really hit home how the decisions we make and actions we take are never isolated-- we are all connected and bound up in one another. 

Excellent collection of short stories.

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bookdragon217's review

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challenging dark emotional informative mysterious reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

5.0

"Women were cursed, Kimberly had decided then: their own bodies didn't even belong to them."

Pleasantview by Celeste Mohamed was on of my favorite reads for Caribbean Heritage Month. This was a propulsive read that I devoured on my plane ride home from vacation. Each short story didn't feel disconnected from the next but instead added more layers to the full picture. Mohamed has solidified herself as an auto-buy for me from now on. All I can say is "What a debut!"

Reading this one made me think about the expression "All that glitters isn't gold." Often time people go on vacation to escape their real.life but never once think about the daily lives of people that live in the places where they vacation. It is easy to forget real life when you are lost in the allure of resort life but just steps away from these places is where you find the reality of life in these places. Mohamed's writing grips you and you won't be able to look away because what she says in these pages is powerful and challenges what you thought you knew about Caribbean island life.

Mohamed does this by giving you a glimpse into the life of the residents of imaginary town Pleasantview. Not only did Mohamed  show you Trinidadian life but she also interrogates heavy themes and call outs the things that need to change.  The stories felt cohesive and the characters were complex. The core themes that intersected with the characters were:

🇹🇹 sex trafficking 
🇹🇹 violence against women
🇹🇹 colorism 
🇹🇹 homophobia in the Caribbean
🇹🇹 mixed race heritage 
🇹🇹 diversity of island culture 
🇹🇹 sexuality and identity 
🇹🇹 social stratification 
🇹🇹 myth of tourism benefiting residents 
🇹🇹 dominance of religion, misogyny & patriarchy
🇹🇹 allure & falsehood of the American dream
🇹🇹 reality of immigration process for Black Caribbean people 
🇹🇹 ancestral ways of wisdom 

If you haven't read this one yet, then what are you waiting for? Mohamed is already a commanding voice in Caribbean literature and one that I am looking forward to reading more from.


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