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| Edwidge Danticat |
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Biography Biography Danticat has been awarded the Pushcart Prize, an American Book Award, and the first Story Prize for outstanding short fiction. She has taught at New York University and the University of Miami. Danticat lives in the "Little Haiti" neighborhood of Miami. "In Danticat's hands pain becomes poetry."The Washington Post From
the Dew Breaker Before my
father was arrested, the president of the republic would drive through
my town on New Year's Eve and throw money from the window of his big shiny
black car. Sun rays would wrap themselves around the brand-new coins,
making them glow like glass. When we heard that the president was coming,
we would clean our entire house, dust our cedar table, and my father would
stay home from the sea in case the president chose to get out of the car
and walk into our house, to offer us something extra, a bag of rice, a
pound of beans, a gallon of corn oil, a promise of future entrance to
the medical school or the agricultural school in Damien, something that
would have bought our loyalty forever, so that twenty, thirty, forty years
after he was long dead, we might still be saying, "Things were hard,
but we once had a president who gave me a sack of rice, some beans, and
a gallon of cooking oil. It was the first and last time anyone in power
gave me anything." As if this sack of rice, this pound of beans,
this gallon of cooking oil were the gold, silver, and bronze medals in
the poverty Olympics. Selected
Works University of Central Florida's Danticat Site African American Literature Book Club
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