Sixteen-year-old Lucille comes of age in 1930s Haiti.
Following the death of her mother during childbirth, Lucille has been cared for by her woodworker father and maternal aunt. Lucille can hear the sacred mapou trees sing, although a teacher chides: “The Church or the spirits, / you can’t serve them both.” Lucille and best friend Fifina dream of opening their own school for girls, one that centers nature and creativity, but ongoing conflict in Haiti poses an obstacle. When Fifina vanishes, Lucille learns she’s been taken by the section chief as his second wife. Then, the section chief cuts down Lucille’s favorite mapou tree, and she confronts him. Fearing for her safety, Papa and Tante Lila send her to Port-au-Prince. As a servant to a wealthy Haitian family, Lucille takes steps toward adulthood; she also falls for her employer’s son and is sent away again, becoming a servant to charismatic American writer Zora Neale Hurston. Lucille learns that activism comes with sacrifice—and even mortal danger. The book’s slow pace demands patience from readers, and the resolution feels rushed, but Pinede’s beautifully written debut sharply observes class divisions and encourages readers to ask critical questions about dignity. Lucille’s optimism is rooted in the purpose she derives from loved ones and a cultural inheritance that values nature over material wealth. The well-drawn characters, strong dialogue, and surprising twists add depth.
A rich, lyrical story that shows the high cost young women pay for daring to dream of a better life.
(historical notes, bibliography, sources) (Verse historical fiction. 13-18)