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The Humming-Bird Tree

by Ian McDonald

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Alan was too young to understand why his parents preferred him to play with the other white boys on the estate. But, he learned that if he was going to meet Kaiser and Jaillin, he had to pretend he was going to meet someone else. Sometimes, the pretending became real, and Alan found himself in betrayal of the friendship that meant so much to him.… (more)
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Alan was too young to understand why his parents preferred him to play with the other white boys on the estate. But, he learned that if he was going to meet Kaiser and Jaillin, he had to pretend he was going to meet someone else. Sometimes, the pretending became real, and Alan found himself in betrayal of the friendship that meant so much to him.

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The humming-bird tree is a Trinidadian symbol of the Garden of Eden. This novel's Adam and Eve are a white Creole Trinidadian boy of eleven and the East-Indian kitchen-girl employed by his mother. They share a first love that is destined to fail, poisoned by the serpent of race and caste prejudice.
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