Reviewed
by Jennifer Dupree, Circulation Supervisor at the Windham Public Library
Helen
Oyeyemi’s “Boy, Snow, Bird” was not at all what I expected, even though I don’t
know exactly what I expected. I didn’t expect a complex story about race and
identity cloaked in something like a Grimm’s fairy tale. I also didn’t expect
to be so enchanted by the protagonist, a young woman named Boy.
The
novel opens in New York in the 1950s, just as Boy Novak escapes her father, the
abusive “rat catcher.” She takes the bus to the end of the line and settles in
a charming small town in Massachusetts. She ends up working in a bookstore and
eventually marries Arturo Whitman. Boy becomes the stepmother of his daughter,
Snow, whose beauty unnerves Boy.
When
Boy gives birth to a daughter named Bird, it becomes evident that Arturo’s
family has been passing as white but are, in fact, black. Soon, our beloved Boy
sends Snow away—perhaps to protect Bird and shield her from knowing how
disliked she is by her grandparents, whom she has outed by the darkness of her
skin and the curl of her hair. Or, maybe the sending-away is because Boy can’t
stand the way Snow enchants everyone around her, including baby Bird. The best
thing about this book is that Oyeyemi lets the reader make up her own mind.
The
second part of the book is from Bird’s point of view. At thirteen, she decides
she wants a relationship with her sister and the two begin exchanging letters.
Through these letters, good and evil become even less clear.
In
the end (and I can’t give too much away), it is not only beauty that’s called
into question, but identity itself. What does it mean to be who we say we are
or not?
This
novel is a deceptively easy read. But, like beauty itself, it’s much more than
its surface.
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