Set in Barbados in the 1940s, this is a novel of Caribbean childhood
with several key features, in addition to the fresh vigour of the young
Austin Clarke's style. It is one of the most angry books on the
attempted destruction of innocence and hope by the colonial education
system in which savage beatings play a distressing part. It is one of
the first novels of childhood to focus on the role of emigration on
parental absence. Milton Sobers' father is in the USA and his stories of
Harlem make Milton want to leave Barbados and join him. Milton's
response is to run away in the hope that he can escape his stepfather
and even reach Harlem.
Austin C. Clarke is hailed as a pioneer of Caribbean-Canadian
literature and is one of Canada's most prolific, if not well known,
writers.