Book Read Free

The Angels' Share

Page 25

by Garfield Ellis


  The Angels' Share

  A place to get away from Kingston and find yourself—Little Ochi

  Little Ochi Restaurant

  Through the night

  View from Spur Tree Hill

  Second view from Spur Tree Hills

  Reading Group Guide

  1. Upon hearing Angela’s name at their first meeting, Nigel Doril asks her “Do you know Angela is Spanish for angels. “How significant is the naming of the character “Angela” to the thematic development of the book?

  2. How does the fact that Angela is a “massager” add to the overall theme of the book? How is the story and the various themes enhanced or enriched by the Angela character?

  3. The tease “Call you father now, no” is woven throughout Chapter Nine. In what way is the phrase and the chapter in general informing about how the presence of fathers impact adolescent behavior?

  4. In Chapter Five, we see Nigel Doril disturbed by the encounter with a homeless man who has been exposed to the acidic red lake and later dies while awaiting transportation to the hospital by the police. Why is he so upset over the treatment of this stranger and how does that relate to the overall theme and contextual fabric of the book?

  5. How did your opinion of each character change throughout the story? Whose story did you enjoy the most? What character did you feel you would love to explore more and why?

  6. The song “Help Me Make it Through the Night” is another reoccurring element of the book. What is the significance of this song to you and did it help you in any way in understanding or liking the story?

  7. Nigel’s quest to find the woman he has been in love with for thirty-five years is the key story line that drives the plot. Is the actual existence of this woman important to the overall theme and success of the story? Does it matter if she exists or not?

  8. When Everton finally confronts his father, what is to be learned from the fact that he is drunk and that the first thing he blurts out is “why you never loved my mother”? How significant a role does Everton’s mother play in the story?

  9. When Everton hears his farther is missing, he goes almost immediately to search for his list: “Ten Questions for My Father” He searches for the original list he had written years ago though he has it memorized. Discuss what this means.

  10. Would you have loved to know what the “Ten Questions for My Father” were? Did you get the essence of the questions from the story even though they were not revealed literally? Discuss why you think the list was not revealed literally and how does that impact the story? Create your own list of what the questions could be and discuss how you came up with the list.

  11. In what way do you think the opening scenes and sequences set up the rest of the book?

  12. Discuss why Angela gives Everton a sensuous massage in chapter twenty-seven and leaves without having sex with him though it is apparent she wants to. Is she trying to make a statement and what would that be?

  GARFIELD ELLIS grew up in Jamaica. He studied marine engineering, management, and public relations in Jamaica and completed his MFA at the University of Miami, as a James Michener Fellow. He is the author of five published books: Flaming Hearts, Wake Rasta, Such As I Have, For Nothing at All, and Till I’m Laid to Rest. His work has appeared in several international journals, including Callaloo, Calabash, the Caribbean Writer, Obsidian III, Anthurium, and Small Axe. Ellis has won the Una Marson Prize for Adult Literature for his collection Flaming Hearts (1997), and later for Till I’m Laid To Rest (2000). He also won the Canute A. Brodhurst Prize for Short Fiction in 2000 and 2005, and the 1990 Heinemann/Lifestyle Short Story Competition.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written consent of the publisher.

  Published by Akashic Books

  ©2015 by Garfield Ellis

  Paperback ISBN-13: 978-1-61775-373-2

  eISBN-13: 978-1-61775-413-5

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2015934082

  First printing

  Akashic Books

  Twitter: @AkashicBooks

  Facebook: AkashicBooks

  E-mail: info@akashicbooks.com

  Website: www.akashicbooks.com

  About Akashic Books

  ___________________

  Thank you for purchasing this Akashic Books e-book.

  Sign up to our email list to receive special offers, access to free e-book excerpts, and vendor-wide digital sales information. Follow this link to join our list, or browse online to www.akashicbooks.com. Free e-book excerpts are available for multiple platforms at www.akashicbooks.com/subject/digits-ebooks/

  ___________________

  Akashic Books is an award-winning independent company dedicated to publishing urban literary fiction and political nonfiction by authors who are either ignored by the mainstream, or who have no interest in working within the ever-consolidating ranks of the major corporate publishers. Akashic Books hosts additional imprints, including the Black Sheep for Young Readers, the Akashic Noir Series, the Akashic Drug Chronicles Series, the Akashic Urban Surreal Series, Infamous Books (curated by Albert "Prodigy" Johnson of Mob Deep, Kaylie Jones Books (curated by Kaylie Jones), the Edge of Sports (curated by David Zirin), Punk Planet Books, Dennis Cooper's Little House on the Bowery Series, Open Lens, Chris Abani's Black Goat Poetry Series, and AkashiClassics: Renegade Reprint Series.

  Our books are available from our website and at online and brick & mortar bookstores everywhere.

  "As many in publishing struggle to find ways to improve on an increasingly outdated business model, independents such as Akashic—which are more nimble and less risk-averse than major publishing houses—are innovators to watch." —Los Angeles Times

  "It's heartening that even as the dinosaurs of publishing are lurching toward extinction, nimble independent publishers like Akashic are producing high-quality, innovative content." —Portland Mercury

  "Akashic fits in that very slight category of publishers, growing slimmer every day, whose colophon is a recommendation on its own." —Toronto Star

  "Akashic is one of the most impressive of the newer small presses, in part because of editing and production values that rival and perhaps surpass the big houses. We're grateful to them . . ." —Denver Post

  "Akashic serves as a prime example of the diversity that marks the small press movement." —Mystery Scene

  "What's great about Akashic is its sense of adventure and its smart eclecticism . . . Anything carrying the logo comes with the guarantee that it's worth checking out." —Hartford Courant

  "An excellent small press." —In These Times

  "[Akashic] fully conveys the charms and possibilities of small press publishing . . . placing a priority on the quality of the books, rather than the possible marketing opportunities they offer."—Poets & Writers

  "Akashic is the brainchild of the charismatic Johnny Temple, the bassist of the rock group Girls Against Boys. Temple set up Akashic to give attention to literary works that are ignored, as well as to prove that publishers don't have to exploit their writers." —IUniverse.com

  E-mail: info@akashicbooks.com

  Website: www.akashicbooks.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev