Spare and rather remarkable. Unsentimental and stern and filled with honoured things.
- Peter Merrington, South African scholar, artist and poet, author of Zebra Crossings: Tales from the Shaman's Record
There are different kinds of belonging. There's the kind that comes with a passport, and there's a kind of helpless, spiritual attachment. Jane Bryce, revisiting the places where she spent her Tanzanian childhood, finds them haunted by the ghosts of a colonial past. In this painfully honest and insightful memoir she explores the themes of identity and belonging and how these can survive a lifetime apart. - Sally Keeble, British political activist, author of She, You, I
JANE BRYCE was born and brought up in Tanzania, and lived in Italy, the UK and Nigeria, before moving to Barbados to teach at the University of the West Indies in 1992. There she taught African Literature and film, and creative writing. She is an active member of the Caribbean literary community as reviewer, editor and judge for literary competitions both locally and regionally. She has published widely as a literary and cultural critic and her short stories are widely published. She also compiled and edited the anthology Caribbean Dispatches: Beyond the Tourist Dream (Macmillan UK: 2006) and is author of Chameleon and other stories (Peepal Tree Press, 2007).