9780062311047
Play Sample

The Book of Jamaica audiobook

  • By: Russell Banks
  • Narrator: Norman Dietz
  • Length: 11 hours 34 minutes
  • Publisher: HarperAudio
  • Publish date: November 12, 2013
  • Language: English
  • (268 ratings)
(268 ratings)
33% Cheaper than Audible
Get for $0.00
  • $9.99 per book vs $14.95 at Audible
    Good for any title to download and keep
  • Listen at up to 4.5x speed
    Good for any title to download and keep
  • Fall asleep to your favorite books
    Set a sleep timer while you listen
  • Unlimited listening to our Classics.
    Listen to thousands of classics for no extra cost. Ever
Loading ...
Regular Price: 27.99 USD

The Book of Jamaica Audiobook Summary

“A truly excellent novel. . . . The morbidly fascinating little twists of human existence are all here: love, sex, life and death, beauty and horror–the works.” Chicago Sun-Times

In The Book of Jamaica, Russell Banks explores the complexities of political life in the Caribbean and its ever-present racial conflicts.

His narrator, a thirty-five-year-old college professor from New Hampshire, goes to Jamaica to write a novel and soon becomes embroiled in the struggles between whites and Blacks. He is especially interested in an ancient tribe called the Maroons, descendants of the Ashanti, who had been enslaved by the Spanish and then fought the British in a hundred-year war. Despite this history of oppression, the Maroons have managed to maintain a relatively autonomous existence in Jamaica. Partly out of guilt and an intellectual sense of social responsibility, Banks’s narrator gets involved in reuniting two clans who have been feuding for generations. Unfortunately, his attempt ends in disaster, and the narrator must deal with his feelings of alienation, isolation, and failure.

Other Top Audiobooks

The Book of Jamaica Audiobook Narrator

Norman Dietz is the narrator of The Book of Jamaica audiobook that was written by Russell Banks

Russell Banks, twice a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, was one of America’s most prestigious fiction writers, a past president of the International Parliament of Writers, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. His work has been translated into twenty languages and he received numerous prizes and awards, including the Common Wealth Award for Literature. He died in January 2023 at the age of eighty-two.

 

About the Author(s) of The Book of Jamaica

Russell Banks is the author of The Book of Jamaica

The Book of Jamaica Full Details

Narrator Norman Dietz
Length 11 hours 34 minutes
Author Russell Banks
Publisher HarperAudio
Release date November 12, 2013
ISBN 9780062311047

Additional info

The publisher of the The Book of Jamaica is HarperAudio. The imprint is HarperAudio. It is supplied by HarperAudio. The ISBN-13 is 9780062311047.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Nina

February 02, 2011

Russell Banks' The Book of Jamaica is a strange and mesmerizing mixture of fact and fiction. Set in the 1970s, a decade after Jamaica's independence from Great Britain, it is the story of conflicting cultures and one man's journey to understand where similarities lay and where differences abide. He is on a mission to research the Maroons of Jamaica, descendants of ex-slaves who ran away from their owners in the late 17th century, fought the British for decades, and won immunity and land of their own, so long as they stayed out of the way of the governing Brits. But his research soon widens to the variety of relationships that exist on the island, including the uneasy alliance between Maroons and Rastafarians, the economic power struggle between white landowners and newly empowered Black Jamaicans, the shifting balance between corrupt policemen and equally corrupt celebrities, and his own personal relationships with his wife, with other women, with his white landlord, and with the Black Jamaicans with whom he becomes enthralled. Our narrator is a man running away from himself and looking for answers about how to live his life, although he himself doesn't acknowledge either truth about himself. He proclaims, "At this time of my life I, like most Americans, believed more in the essential sameness among people than in their difference. I thought I could learn to know what it was like to be a Maroon. I could not then see any conflict between that belief and my ambition to replace a point of view with a vision." Danger hinted at, but not understood, until it is too late. He finds much to admire in the lives of the Black Jamaicans he meets ("Survival, to me, was something one took for granted, and therefore it was more than likely that , placed in similar circumstances, I would not survive") and much to disdain in the lifestyle of the whites ("with their fashion designer gowns and jackets, their cut-crystal cocktail glasses, their parquet floors and real estate holdings"). Instead of finding himself through rejecting the White culture and trying to align himself with the underclass' ways of understanding life, the narrator loses his grip on his own reality and fails to understand much at all. His efforts to repair an old rift between Maroon sects leads to tragedy and his attempts to live on precepts of simplicity lead to complications beyond his imagination. Worst of all, he loses himself completely by the end of the novel: the first person telling of his story shifts into a second person addressing him as "you" and then into a third person narration about "Johnny", which is not even his real name but a name given to him by Black Jamaicans, a generic name given for a "good American." Good he may be, but lost he becomes, lost and bloodied and alone, and sent packing back to America.The Book of Jamaica is a chilling allegory about an infant nation fighting to become independent not only in name but in fact, and about a fractured man struggling to become whole. Both country and man balance precariously between fact and fiction, between what they know is true and what they wish for, between what they want and what they fear, and between dream and nightmare. It's a fine line between finding your true self, who and what you were meant to be, and losing yourself -- your soul -- forever. For more reviews, go to http://www.readallday/org

Cissy

September 17, 2009

This is the second or third time I've read this book (in a few years), and I see more interesting subtleties with each reading. I am drawn into the story, but find it a little disquieting. It's interesting the way the book is written from 3 slightly different perspectives of the same narrator. It's as though "Johnny" moves through three different versions of himself over the course of the story, and then in the third version, the narration changes to third person, and he's no longer who he was at the start of his Jamaican immersion--he has become alienated from his former self--a professor from the States--as well as from the Jamaicans he tried to understand.

Norman

October 11, 2018

This was a very informative read, I learned a lot about Jamaican culture and politics. As a novel, it was a good read as well as being informative. I recommend it to anyone with an interest in the history and culture of Jamaica as well as the people who live there or used to live there.

Catherine

August 27, 2009

Would have given up on this if not for Wendy's recommendation, and found it well worth reading. Seemed disjointed and out of synch but that corresponds with the protagonists frame of mind and probably also meshed with "Johnny's" increasing obsession with the Maroons, not to mention the rum imbibed and ganja injested. Serendipitously I followed this read immediately with Russell Banks Rule of the Bone which is partially set in Jamaica.

Edward

March 17, 2010

His best I think.

Frequently asked questions

Listening to audiobooks not only easy, it is also very convenient. You can listen to audiobooks on almost every device. From your laptop to your smart phone or even a smart speaker like Apple HomePod or even Alexa. Here’s how you can get started listening to audiobooks.

  • 1. Download your favorite audiobook app such as Speechify.
  • 2. Sign up for an account.
  • 3. Browse the library for the best audiobooks and select the first one for free
  • 4. Download the audiobook file to your device
  • 5. Open the Speechify audiobook app and select the audiobook you want to listen to.
  • 6. Adjust the playback speed and other settings to your preference.
  • 7. Press play and enjoy!

While you can listen to the bestsellers on almost any device, and preferences may vary, generally smart phones are offer the most convenience factor. You could be working out, grocery shopping, or even watching your dog in the dog park on a Saturday morning.
However, most audiobook apps work across multiple devices so you can pick up that riveting new Stephen King book you started at the dog park, back on your laptop when you get back home.

Speechify is one of the best apps for audiobooks. The pricing structure is the most competitive in the market and the app is easy to use. It features the best sellers and award winning authors. Listen to your favorite books or discover new ones and listen to real voice actors read to you. Getting started is easy, the first book is free.

Research showcasing the brain health benefits of reading on a regular basis is wide-ranging and undeniable. However, research comparing the benefits of reading vs listening is much more sparse. According to professor of psychology and author Dr. Kristen Willeumier, though, there is good reason to believe that the reading experience provided by audiobooks offers many of the same brain benefits as reading a physical book.

Audiobooks are recordings of books that are read aloud by a professional voice actor. The recordings are typically available for purchase and download in digital formats such as MP3, WMA, or AAC. They can also be streamed from online services like Speechify, Audible, AppleBooks, or Spotify.
You simply download the app onto your smart phone, create your account, and in Speechify, you can choose your first book, from our vast library of best-sellers and classics, to read for free.

Audiobooks, like real books can add up over time. Here’s where you can listen to audiobooks for free. Speechify let’s you read your first best seller for free. Apart from that, we have a vast selection of free audiobooks that you can enjoy. Get the same rich experience no matter if the book was free or not.

It depends. Yes, there are free audiobooks and paid audiobooks. Speechify offers a blend of both!

It varies. The easiest way depends on a few things. The app and service you use, which device, and platform. Speechify is the easiest way to listen to audiobooks. Downloading the app is quick. It is not a large app and does not eat up space on your iPhone or Android device.
Listening to audiobooks on your smart phone, with Speechify, is the easiest way to listen to audiobooks.

footer-waves