The Gift Of Misfortune
| Category: | Literary Fiction |
|---|---|
| Author: | Joseph Policape |
| Publisher: | Joseph Policape |
| Number of Pages: | 348 pages |
| ISBN-13: | 979-8261855347 |
The Gift of Misfortune by Joseph Policape tells the story
of Armand Etienne, a Haitian immigrant, and his sister Deborah, who leaves
behind the dictatorship of Duvalier only to face new trials in America.
Initially filled with hope, Armand’s life spirals after he marries Monica, a
union vehemently opposed by his family and spiritual advisors. The marriage quickly
transforms into emotional and physical abuse, infidelity, and manipulation,
leading to a protracted divorce battle where Armand faces false accusations of
domestic violence and child abuse. As a man anchored in his Christian faith,
can Armand discover a foothold or lose everything he has worked for hard for?
What immediately gripped me was the pathos woven into this
story, and I couldn’t stop following the ordeals of Armand. He is depicted as
genuinely flawed yet determined to win in life against the odds. Joseph
Policape captures the immigrant experience with clarity, allowing the confusion
associated with culture shock to shine through the narrative. The struggle
against a biased court system, the fight for access to children, and systemic
injustice are elements that are too familiar to many immigrants, and I enjoyed
how they are explored in The Gift of Misfortune. There is a rawness in
the way the author examines male victimhood in a relationship that had me
rooting for the Armand, and the spiritual currents of this book drive home an
inexorable message that unveils the gifts hidden in misfortune.
Characterization is top-notch in this tale, and Armand is the stoic who
inspires, even through his suffering, while supporting characters like Thomas
and Deborah are finely drawn. They ground the author’s exploration of loyalty
and Christian wisdom in the story. I
enjoyed the economy of words in the prose, the spiritual seasons evoked in this
book, and the realism imbued in every scene.