lokroma reviewed If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery
Review of 'If I Survive You' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Trelawny moves with his family from Jamaica to Miami where the desperate need for people he meets to pigeonhole him (Are you Black? You don't look Jamaican. I thought you were Puerto Rican) seriously complicates his coming of age. His struggle to find his place in America is a blistering picture of the caste system that exists in the country and even within the minority community itself. From high school in Florida to college in the Midwest (where Trelawny is labeled as unequivocally Black) Escoffery presents a surgically precise view of what new immigrants face in coming to the U.S.
But the book isn't a political screed. The story of Trelawny and his family as they navigate the cultural obstacles of a new country is compelling and feels genuine. The characters are well drawn and sympathetic.
In this case audio is the way to go. This book is loaded with …
Trelawny moves with his family from Jamaica to Miami where the desperate need for people he meets to pigeonhole him (Are you Black? You don't look Jamaican. I thought you were Puerto Rican) seriously complicates his coming of age. His struggle to find his place in America is a blistering picture of the caste system that exists in the country and even within the minority community itself. From high school in Florida to college in the Midwest (where Trelawny is labeled as unequivocally Black) Escoffery presents a surgically precise view of what new immigrants face in coming to the U.S.
But the book isn't a political screed. The story of Trelawny and his family as they navigate the cultural obstacles of a new country is compelling and feels genuine. The characters are well drawn and sympathetic.
In this case audio is the way to go. This book is loaded with rich Jamaican dialect whose power is diluted in print. The version I listened to is read by a narrator of Jamaican background and it was wonderful to hear.