Breath, Eyes, Memory
Breath, Eyes, Memory is Edwidge Danticat's acclaimed 1994 novel, and was chosen as an Oprah Book Club Selection in May 1998. The novel deals with questions of racial, linguistic and gender identity in interconnected ways.
Plot introduction
Breath, Eyes, Memory was Danticat's first novel, published when she was only twenty-five years old. As she has recounted in interviews, the book began as an essay of her childhood in Haiti and her move as a young girl to New York City.The novel is written in a first person narrative. The narrator, Sophie Caco, relates her direct experiences and impressions from age 12 until she is in her twenties. Sophie is the product of a violent rape and is raised by her loving aunt in a village near Port-au-Prince for 12 years. At this point, Sophie is unexpectedly summoned by her mother, who lives in Brooklyn having gained asylum and immigrated to the United States. Living with her mother in New York, Sophie discovers the trauma her mother endures inclusive of violent nightmares reminiscent of her experience prior to fleeing Haiti.
The major conflict of the novel is the main character's battle with her inner self. Because she is a child of rape, she is a reminder to her mother of the wounds that had been inflicted on her. Her mother came to resent her own self and body and constantly has nightmares about the rape. She grows into a woman who fights a battle with herself as a woman, wife, mother, as well as daughter. She is also in turn fighting the weight of her inheritance, as well as her mother's past experiences.
Sophie marries Joseph, a musician who lives next door to them. Sophie begins to feel frustrated and confused, both by anxieties and responsibilities after her mother had thrown her out the house when she had failed the virginity test. To get away from it all, she flees to Haiti along with her infant daughter, without a word to her husband who is away touring. Then her mother, Martine, also comes to Haiti. During the trip to Haiti, mother and daughter reconcile.