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Brother by David Chariandy
Brother by David Chariandy











This aspect of the book feels urgent given the Black Lives Matter movement.One sweltering summer in the Park, a housing complex outside of Toronto, Michael and Francis are coming of age and learning to stomach the careless prejudices and low expectations that confront them as young men of black and brown ancestry.

Brother by David Chariandy

Mother hadn’t changed out of her uniform, and her sneakers sounded her approach on the market floors with a funny squeaking sound.”Ĭhariandy describes the vulnerabilities of the powerless in other moving passages: the way in which the mother pretends she is not hungry in order that her boys have enough to eat the way the brothers must play along each time they are stopped and searched by the police.Įspecially astute is Chariandy’s depiction of the hostile white gaze: the police officers in Brother look upon all black men as potential suspects and treat them as such.

Brother by David Chariandy

This is a slim novel, yet Chariandy manages to encompass a world with astonishing detail and feeling inside it: the family’s acute poverty is conveyed particularly well and the sense of alienation it brings, such as when the family visit a shopping mall and are made to feel unwelcome: “As we moved from store to store, the clerks seemed especially attentive to us. Chariandy describes their hopes and desires: Francis’s ambitions to be a hip-hop artist, his gay desire, and Michael’s first relationship with a neighbour. Every chapter builds to the inevitability of this moment and is freighted with a great and awful fatalism.īrother is not just a study of Francis, but a dark bildungsroman about boys – who are part of a black underclass – turning into men. The sibling relationship is beautifully conveyed (Francis’s effortless popularity, his protectiveness, Michael’s adoration of Francis) and with such tenderness that Francis’s death is devastating when it comes. I’ve kept to a minimum all discomforting talk about the past.” What is most poignant here is Michael’s memory of her as a fierce, strict mother with an indomitable spirit – a far cry from the broken woman she is now: “For the past 10 years, I’ve been careful with Mother. Michael’s mother shows signs of dementia too, or at least confusion brought on by grief. Memory played a big part in Chariandy’s debut, Soucouyant, about a mother suffering from dementia. Michael is now 28 and the past replays in his mind in parallel chapters to the present day, in which he is caring for his mother and working gruelling hours in a storeroom.

Brother by David Chariandy Brother by David Chariandy

We first meet Michael 10 years after Francis has lost his life, aged 19, and the story unravels backwards. They live with their Trinidadian-born single mother, who works as a cleaner in a run-down district of Toronto.













Brother by David Chariandy