Marie-Elena John is a Caribbean writer whose first novel, Unburnable, was published in 2006.
Background
John was born and raised in Antigua and is a former development specialist of the African Development Foundation, the World Council of Churches’ Program to Combat Racism, and Global Rights (formerly the International Human Rights Law Group), where she worked in support of the pro-democracy movement in Nigeria and in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Career
She is known especially for her work in the United Nations and at local and national levels to raise awareness about the denial of inheritance rights to women. Marie-Elena John made history in 1986 as the first Black woman valedictorian of New York"s City College (City College of New York). She later earned a Masters of International Affairs from Columbia University, specializing in culture and development in Africa.
She was also selected by Book Expo America as one of ten "emerging voices" for 2006, chosen from among the debut novelists reviewed by Publishers Weekly for the 2005-2006 period.
Unburnable, which moves back and forth between modern times and the past, is primarily a historical novel centred on the hanging of a family matriarch, and fuses Caribbean history, African heritage, and African-American sensibilities. Marie-Elena John parlays her knowledge of the African diaspora, including the United States and the Caribbean island of Dominica, into a work that shifts from modern to colonial and pre-colonial times, exploring the intersection of history, African mythology and African-Caribbean culture.
In this respect, Unburnable is both a contemporary Caribbean novel as well as a neo-slave narrative. Unburnable also notably includes the original inhabitants of the Caribbean, the Kalinago (also called the Carib Indians).
lieutenant has been compared to Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea and to Jamaica Kincaid’s The Autobiography of My Mother.