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January 7-10, 1999 Writers' Workshops - January 11-14, 1999 |
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JAMAICA KINCAID |
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"The impulse to possess is alive in every heart, and some people choose vast plains, some people choose high mountains, some people choose wide seas, and some people choose husbands; I chose to possess myself." |
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Jamaica Kincaid
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| "My mother died at the moment I was born, and so for my whole life there was nothing standing between myself and eternity; at my back was always a bleak, black wind. I could not have known at the beginning of my life that this would be so, I only came to know this in the middle of my life, just at the time when I was no longer young and realized that I had less of some of the things I used to have in abundance and more of some of the things I had scarcely had at all. And this realization of loss and gain made me look backward and forward: at my beginning was this woman whose face I had never seen, but at my end was nothing, no one between me and the black room of the world. I came to feel that for my whole life I had been standing on a precipice, that my loss had made me vulnerable, hard, and helpless; on knowing this I became overwhelmed with sadness and shame and pity for myself." | |
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from "The Autobiography of My Mother"
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JAMAICA KINCAID was born and educated in St. John's, Antigua, in the West Indies, but moved to New York City when she was 16 in 1966. She now lives with her husband and children in Vermont. Her stories have appeared in "The New Yorker," "Rolling Stone" and "The Paris Review." |
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