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Synopsis
Winner of the American Book Award for Easy in the Islands, Bob Shacochis returns to the setting of his first collection of stories with Swimming in the Volcano, a haunting and evocative novel possessed of the same beauty as the places and people of the Caribbean. Set on the fictional Caribbean island of St. Catherine, an American expatriate becomes unwittingly embroiled in an internecine war between rival factions of the government. Into this potentially explosive scene enters a woman once loved and lost, but who remains a powerful temptation-one that proves impossible to resist.
Publishers Weekly
This first novel is as evocative and beautifully written as any of Shacochis's short fiction ( Easy in the Streets ). Unfortunately, however, the greater length reveals failings in the American Book Award winner's grasp of plot, structure and pacing. In 1976, Mitchell Wilson signs on as an agricultural economist on St. Catherine, a fictional island in the Lesser Antilles. Just as he has settled into a routine and a circle of expatriate and native friends, his life is disrupted by the appearance of his first love, the volatile Johanna. Equally unsteady is the island's ruling coalition, which is coming apart under threat from a counterrevolutionary menace fabricated by discontented members. The bulk of the book is filled with careful, almost pointillist, portraits of Wilson's friends, an often unattractive group who combine '60s altruism with '70s self-involvement. After he has so carefully set the stage, though, the rush of events that Shacochis manipulates in the last fourth of the book seems improbable and leaves the reader feeling cheated. While he does not stint on an extravagant backdrop of island patois, poincianas, politics, cocoa tea and callaloo, Shacochis's touch is not so sure as he deploys the characters in this setting: men and women, blacks and whites, colonials and revolutionaries, all struggling with a combination of idealism and reality. (Apr.)