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Abstract

Knopf. 2013. isbn 9780307271792 Max Ardin Sr., the suspiciously high- minded schoolmaster in Claire of the Sea Light, says something memorable about life's painful separations when he tells the part-time teacher and sometimes lover whose dismissal from both roles he has just cleverly, discrete- ly effected: "You're like a starfish, con- stantly in need of a piece of yourself breaking off and walking away in order to become something new." While the runaway Claire remains in hiding, these and the rest of the novel's character ensemble circle dolefully about, employing and observing Danticat's signature tropes for the undervoiced Haitian people's dire-straits desire to be heard (also, for her own authorial determination to give them voice): radio stations, lighthouses, sign language, butter- flies (whose fate is to be immemori- ally/memorially both mute and beau- tiful), and wonns (a Haitian children's singing game similar to the English "Ring a-ring o' Roses").

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