Calumet Editions

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House of Fossils

In House of Fossils, Marilene Phipps follows Unseen Worlds with a poetic, genre-bending fictional memoir. Narrated by Io—an alter-soul seeking beauty and timelessness—this immigrant story confronts how race, skin color, culture, and others’ reactions can imprison identity. Moving between Haiti and the wider world, it explores Haiti’s color-and-class hierarchies, Christianity–Vodou spirituality, and turbulent politics alongside an America undergoing multicultural transformation. Phipps crafts vivid characters and high emotional intensity in a quest to live beyond inherited ‘fossils.’

haunting lyricism

—KIRKUS REVIEWS

Description

Following her amazing memoir Unseen Worlds, Marilene Phipps offers us House of Fossils, a poetic, genre-busting fictional memoir with the same high emotionality and vivid characterization that makes all her work so riveting. Io, is a form of the author’s second soul, seeks beauty and timelessness in gestures, manner and thought, but finds herself caught in a world where human beings are held hostage to their racial origins, skin color, culture, and other people’s reactions to these. She is an immigrant who aims to belong and develop an identity, freed from the kind of fossilization imposed on one’s psyche by ancestry, family expectations and cultural norms. Her story weaves Haiti—its social idiosyncrasies built around color and class, its singular religious imagination combining Christianity and Vodou, its irruptive political history—with other areas of the US and of the world. The relevance of this book is clear in an America increasingly experiencing a multicultural evolution.

Product Details

PublishedDecember 12, 2019
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length248
ISBN-13978-1950743162
Dimensions6 x 0.62 x 9 inches

Phipps has composed a holy and irreducible vision of Haiti

—Paul Harding, Pulitzer Prize Winner for his novel Tinkers

This book sent me into parts of myself in a way I’ve often missed in other memoirs. House of Fossils asks the essential questions to make the presence of the past, small beginnings and silent happenings speak to identity and being human in a powerful way, without pretense or noise. I couldn’t put this book down until I turned the last page.

—Tete Cobblah, verified review on Amazon

Ms. Phipps takes us on a fascinating journey through Nova Scotia, Haiti and Massachusetts and through the emotional wilds of a human heart.

—Patricia Kent, verified review on Amazon

Loved it!! Anything but easy to categorize or condense, House of Fossils is a portrait of the restless soul in exile and the role of loss and memory. Ms. Phipps-Kettlewell has created a work of incredible lyricism, complexity and depth; at once correspondent and storyteller, the author weaves personal context within an overall living and historical landscape that perturbs each page.

—Manya Tolino, verified review on Amazon

It deals with real and potentially painful issues of family, loss, and power, all with an acceptance and broad view that I found both soothing and thought-provoking.

—eDave, verified review on Amazon

The universality of the issues raised in the novel kept rising up and crashing down like the waves of the seas that dashed against the Mary Celeste. Family dynamics are relatable and described in a way that is deliciously truthful, intricate, often painful, yet mostly loving.

—Bonnie2020, verified review on Amazon