An Absence of Ruins was originally published in 1967, a period of
decolonising ferment in Jamaica. This important and much sought-after
Caribbean classic is now lovingly restored to print, with an
introduction by Jeremy Poynting.
Patterson writes in the tradition of Dostoyevsky and Camus, creating a
spiritual heir to the unnamed 'I' of Notes from the Underground or La
Chute. Through the tangled love life of one Alexander Blackman,
Patterson offers up a devastating critique of middle-class pretension,
turning instead to the vibrant realities of the Jamaican working class.
Full of sardonic humour and social commentary, the novel looks into the
dark heart of social hierarchy, colonial education and the impact both
have on the individual and the many.
"A very moving book about integrity preserved through an honest
appraisal of its apparent loss."
Robert Nye, The Guardian
Orlando Patterson was born in Jamaica in 1940. He is the author of
three novels: The Children of Sisyphus (1964, reprinted by Peepal Tree
Press, 2011), An Absence of Ruins (1967), and Die the Long Day
(1972). He received the National Book Award for Non-Fiction in 1991, and
the Order of Distinction from the Government of Jamaica in 1999. He is
now Professor of Sociology at Harvard University.