YA Review: When the Mapou Sings (Nadine Pinede)

About the Book:

Infused with magical realism, this story blends first love and political intrigue with a quest for justice and self-determination in 1930s Haiti.

Sixteen-year-old Lucille hopes to one day open a school alongside her best friend where girls just like them can learn what it means to be Haitian: to learn from the mountains and the forests around them, to carve, to sew, to draw, and to sing the songs of the Mapou, the sacred trees that dot the island nation. But when her friend vanishes without a trace, a dream—a gift from the Mapou—tells Lucille to go to her village’s section chief, the local face of law, order, and corruption, which puts her life and her family’s at risk.
Forced to flee her home, Lucille takes a servant post with a wealthy Haitian woman from society’s elite in Port-au-Prince. Despite a warning to avoid him, she falls in love with her employer’s son. But when their relationship is found out, she must leave again—this time banished to another city to work for a visiting American writer and academic conducting fieldwork in Haiti. While Lucille’s new employer studies vodou and works on the novel that will become Their Eyes Were Watching God, Lucille risks losing everything she cares about—and any chance of seeing her best friend again—as she fights to save their lives and secure her future in this novel in verse with the racing heart of a thriller.

*Review Contributed by Karen Yingling, Staff Reviewer*

In 1935, Lucille is living in a small village in Haiti with her father, who is a woodworker, and her aunt Lila, since her mother passed away shortly after Lucille was born. Lucille can hear the mapou tree sing to her, and feels that her mother communicates with her that way. She attends a convent school run by Belgian nuns with her friend Fifina, for whom she has deep feelings. While the people of the village are happy that the occupation by Americans has ended, the new government is not particularly helpful. When Fifina’s father, who runs a newspaper, runs afoul of the section chief, he is beaten, and Fifina is forced to become an “outside wife” to him. Lucille is devastated, and shortly after this, her mapou tree is cut down. She reports the tree as stolen to the police, and even takes them to the section chief’s house to see that he has cut down the tree. Of course, this puts Lucille in danger. Her father and aunt arrange with her cousin, Phebus, for Lucille to go to the big city and live with Madame Ovide. She has to deal with the housekeeper, Celestina, but sells carvings and wood polish at the market to earn some money to try to get home. Madame’s son, Oreste, is home from attending college in New York City, where he is involved with the NAACP. The two slowly fall in love, and when Celestina finds out, Madame Ovide sends Lucille to work in a house she is renting to an American. This American turns out to be Zora Neal Hurston, who is very sympathetic to Lucille. Through a visitor, Lucille finds out that Fifina might have run away from the section chief and lost a baby. Eventually, Lucille helps Hurston with some of her research, but later gets embroiled in the political unrest, reconnects with Oreste, and even helps save his mother.

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