The Hills Were Joyful Together

by Roger Mais

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Set in a yard which is a microcosm of Kingston slum life, this novel gives a picture of Jamaica and the dreadful conditions in which the working class live. This book precedes the Rasta story of Brother Man.

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3 reviews
The Hills Were Joyful Together, Roger Mais’ first novel, displays the promise exhibited by his later works. Taking place in a Kingston yard complex, Mais explores the challenges of Jamaica’s urban working class. The novel can be brutal and violent, yet there are notes of redemption along with a strain of social criticism throughout. The novel centers around the life of a neighborhood with subplots focusing on the emotional life of disempowered teenagers, a man cuckolded by his wife, the hard, mundane existence of women, and other vignettes. The second part of the novel coalesces on challenges faced by the character Surjue. Confined to prison as the result of a botched robbery, Serjue adjust to prison life while working to be show more reunited with his wife. The second part of the novel also shifts with the introduction of a Greek like chorus which Mais continued to use as a device in his novel Brother Man. The work feels full of this type of experimentation, and the introduction states that Mais was originally planning for the novel to be a trilogy. Mais seeks to show and encompass the full life of a Jamaican neighborhood, and with this, the full range of experience and emotion experienced by its denizens. Although there are many instances of kindness and reliance built by community bonds, there is also a strong note of futility. The social condition drives people to extremes and madness. Mais also critiques the various solutions sought after by the people with a hint of disdain at organized religion, communism, and the corruption of bureaucracies. Seemingly one note of hope is the idea of escape, off the island, where enemies and the cruel madness of life can’t reach a person. The other idea signalling that all is not lost is that, despite the cruelty we wreck upon each other, ultimately we will find salvation in each other as well. show less
By golly this book is unrelieved in its grimness. Reminiscent in style to Steinbeck but with no real relief. The characters are trapped in their narrative and so are you. I read half the novel and couldn’t bring myself to continue.
Roger Mais writes of poor people in Jamaica. His tales are moving and unforgettable. Don’t miss THE HILLS WERE JOYFUL TOGETHER, his 1st novel.

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Author Information

6+ Works 118 Members
Mais spoke for the dispossessed black community of Jamaica. His novel "The Hills Were Joyful Together" (1953) is a devastating portrait of degradation and violence that uses a complicated symbolic structure. Set in a tenement yard in Kingston, the work focuses on a multitude of characters and their struggle merely to exist. In 1952, Mais left show more Jamaica, perhaps because of the negative reaction to the social voice in his work. The works published after he left his native country continue his preoccupation with the social constrictions of his time, and they show a growing tension between the concept of the artist's duty and the notion of the individual artistic conscience. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Hills Were Joyful Together
Original publication date
1953
People/Characters
Surjue
Important places
Kingston, Jamaica

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PR9265.9 .M3Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
39
Popularity
745,040
Reviews
3
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2