Calumet Editions

Unseen Worlds

Adventures at the Crossroads of Voudou Spirits and Latter-day Saints

Marilène Phipps’s extraordinary life begins in Haiti—land of Vodou spirits and the world’s first Black republic—where paradise and hell coexist. In this powerful memoir, she traces a family descended from both European aristocrats and African slaves, and encounters rebels, Vodou priests, popes, astrologers, monks, exorcists, Mormon bishops, scholars, and missionaries. The 2010 earthquake shatters her world, propelling a search for modern answers to ancient questions of identity, origin, and destiny.

reveals why all of us should keep searching!

—Tete Cobblah, verified review on Amazon

Description

The extraordinary life of Marilène Phipps began in Haiti—the magical island of African Vodou gods who followed their devotees on the slave ships, and the world’s first black republic—the singular cultural context and exotic milieu of the Caribbean, where hell and paradise can transfix us daily. In this powerful memoir, we enter the lives of a family who are both descendants of European aristocrats and African slaves. We meet Phipps’s godfather, the rebel leader Guslé Villedrouin, and we relive her experiences with Vodou priests and spirits, a cold-eyed pope, a charismatic Muslim astrologer, Catholic monks and exorcists, American Mormon bishops, scholars and missionaries. Through it all, we are stirred by the antithetical feel of entitlement and destitution, barbarism and lyricism, infinity and insanity. The 2010 earthquake in Haiti brings a collapse to Phipps’s world, but is also the start for her to find modern answers to the ancient questions, ‘Who are we? Where do we come from? Where are we going?’

Product Details

PublishedFebruary 8, 2023
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1732794498

Amazon Prime has delivered my copy of Unseen Worlds by impeccably gifted and versatile award-winning scholar Marilène Phipps-Kettlewell. I’ve been hooked since. Unseen Worlds compellingly weaves a captivating miscellany of historical, cultural, religious, and autobiographical anecdotes primarily set in Haiti. Adorned with tersely cogent, riveting, and relatable sententiae, this book lends itself to a keen sense of patrimonial belonging defined by existential challenges, vulnerabilities, resilience, and metaphysical longing of the human soul in quest of the transcendental unknown.

—Beau Pierre-Louis, verified review on Amazon

This book reveals why all of us should keep searching! Each chapter took me away from the noise of now to a past where lessons abounded in a meaningful, spiritual and poetic way. The author seemed to embrace life with the curiosity, courage, respect and honesty we often wish we could associate with our lives. This is a must read for poets, artists, lovers of books and those who are still searching.

—Tete Cobblah, verified review on Amazon

Some experiences are very difficult to put down on paper due to their infinite quality of being delicious open wounds. The Haiti of Ms. Phipps is that and is real and has nothing to do with the miles and miles of print spewed out by journalists and good meaning visitors. This is felt in the gut and in the heart! It’s a rare beauty!

—Fabybaby. Verified review on Amazon

I found the story of Marilene’s life very moving, as she interweaves her faith journey (Catholicism, vodou, Episcopalianism, etc.) and a geographical one (childhood in France and Haiti and adulthood in Haiti and New England.). Rarely does a secular writer write so well about how beliefs evolve over one’s life, and I could empathize with many experiences in her trajectory, particularly the family relationships) – even why she became baptized into the Mormon religion. But the triumph is how she combines her memories with the tragic history of Haiti; her final evocation of her island home as ruined Garden of Eden moved me to tears.

—Susan Emanuel, verified review on Amazon