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Edward P. Jones
The Dew Breaker
by Edwidge Danticat

Cover image   Availability: Not available new from Amazon.com

Edition: Hardcover
Publisher: Knopf (2004-03-09)
ISBN-10/ISBN-13: 1400041147 / 9781400041145
Amazon.com Sales Rank: 917403

Other editions
Paperback (Vintage $14.95)
 
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A 2004 Vacation Reading (selected by The New York Times)
“Short stories by a Haitian-American writer who has pungently portrayed the distress and torment of the Haitian people both in this country and in their homeland. The title story of this collection describes an agent of the 1960's dictator Franois Duvalier waiting for a political victim, arresting him, torturing him, then murdering him at last.”

Book description
From the universally acclaimed author of Breath, Eyes, Memory and Krik? Krak!, a brilliant, deeply moving work of fiction that explores the world of a “dew breaker”—a torturer—a man whose brutal crimes in the country of his birth lie hidden beneath his new American reality.

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.


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