Poet Birdsong’s fiction debut: three novellas about African American women grappling with their families’ and communities’ attitudes toward their albinism.
They come from very different backgrounds in Shreveport, Louisiana. Suzette is the spoiled daughter of a wealthy car dealer, still living at home at age 20 because her controlling father doesn’t want her to go to college or get a job. Six years out of college, Maple is still drifting among dead-end jobs and taking handouts from her mother, a good-time gal whose income currently comes from a drug-dealing boyfriend but whose past includes stripping and porn. Agnes fled poverty in Shreveport for Fisk University, graduate school, and a lectureship at Vanderbilt, but she’s now 34, unemployed, and broke, grading high school essays in Utah for a pittance. Nonetheless, the three novellas show each woman shaped by her skin and people’s reactions to it as central facts in their development. Suzette’s story, Drive, is an overlong coming-of-age tale with a fairly predictable denouement redeemed by a poignant depiction of a sheltered girl: “Everything that’s happenin around me is about me. But don’t nobody wanna tell me wha’s goin on.” Maple’s odyssey in Bottled Water is a more interesting saga of devastating loss and grief overcome with the help of a man who has his own experience of bereavement to deal with. Maple’s Momi is a fabulously vital character, inappropriately open with her daughter about sex and drugs but lovingly accepting of the white skin that Maple—like Suzette—thinks makes her undesirable. We see in Mind the Prompt that Agnes’ experiences of being mocked for her skin color in high school by her social-climbing sister have scarred her emotionally to the extent that she can’t keep a job and lives with an abusive man, but even this keeningly sad tale offers hope in a denouement that shows Agnes, like Suzette and Maple, tentatively embracing a new beginning.
A thoughtful examination of a subject rarely addressed in contemporary literature.