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CM . . .
. Volume XI Number 6 . . . .November 12, 2004
excerpt:
Within the main characters dwell a simplicity that speaks of basic human virtues and a people grounded in self and family and community, but these are offset by examples of their antithesis in the community at large. In "The Nutmeg Princess," beauty shines from the inside of a black princess with dewdrop diamonds in her hair, and a little boy is "happy because [his] home was full of love, and material things didn't matter to him." The rest of the village people, however, cared only for riches. To fit the spare but lyrical prose, Keens-Douglas has stripped the complexities of human nature down to its bare essentials. The best example of his ability to distill opposing notions into perfect little stories is "Freedom Child of the Sea," which lays bare the dark history of slavery in a way even the youngest readers can understand while still leaving the optimistic message that there's still hope for us all. Highly Recommended. Cora Lee is a Vancouver, BC, writer and editor.
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