39 pages 1 hour read

Edwidge Danticat

Claire of the Sea Light

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2013

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Summary and Study Guide

Overview

Claire of the Sea Light is a 2013 work of historical fiction by Haitian-American novelist Edwidge Danticat. The novel portrays the lives of the various inhabitants of a small town in Haiti, relaying a series of related events from several different characters’ perspectives. This guide is based on the 2013 Random House e-book version of Claire of the Sea Light.

Plot Summary

The novel begins on Claire Limyè Lanmè Faustin’s seventh birthday. That morning, a fisherman named Caleb disappears at sea, and Claire’s father Nozias, a fellow fisherman, helps to search for him. Claire’s mother died in childbirth, and the local fabric vendor’s wife, Gaëlle Lavaud, once nursed the infant Claire. On the day Claire was born, gang members murder Gaëlle’s husband in a radio station, and when Claire turned four, Gaëlle’s daughter, Rose, died in a car accident.

Nozias, struggling to support Claire on his own, offers Claire to Gaëlle several times. On the night of Claire’s seventh birthday, Gaëlle finally agrees to take Claire. As they talk, Claire runs away to the abandoned lighthouse. Nozias and many others search for her. She finally returns when she witnesses Nozias and Gaëlle dragging Max Ardin Junior, the prominent schoolmaster’s adult son, from the sea.

Ten years prior, Bernard lives in Cité Pendue, an impoverished slum on the outskirts of Ville Rose. His parents run a successful restaurant whose main clientele are gang-members. Though they worry about the gangs, the money they make has paid for a good education for their son. Bernard wants to become a journalist and, as a teenager, he writes news reports at the local radio station. His friend Max Ardin Junior also works there; the two are very close. Bernard tells Max about his idea for a radio show about the local gangs. Someone steals the idea, and the gang-members at Bernard’s parent’s restaurant tease him about it.

Max calls to tell Bernard that his father is sending him to Miami after he impregnated his maid. The next day, Bernard is arrested in connection with the shooting at the radio station that killed Gaëlle’s husband. After a day in jail, a local gang leader organizes his release. Annoyed at being wrongly accused, Bernard decides to write up his story. That night, however, officers shoot him his bed. The radio describes him as just another bandit.

Max Junior returns to Haiti for the first time in 10 years (around the time of Claire’s seventh birthday). He has come to meet a son he conceived years before, Pamaxime. He meets the boy, and the boy’s mother, Flore, a former maid in his father’s house. Max instantly connects with the child, but Flore is distant. Flore tells him she does not want to see him again. Distraught, Max drives home but cannot face his father. He then drives to the beach, where he sits and thinks of Bernard.

Louise is a radio host and sometime teacher at Max Senior’s school. She and Max Senior are also occasional lovers. Louise teaches an adult literacy class for Nozias and Odile, the mother of Henri, a child she slapped in a previous class. Max Senior asks Louise to attend a meeting with Odile. There, Odile slaps Louise. Louise takes this as Max Senior disciplining her. To get back at him, Louise interviews Flore on her radio show. Flore tells the story of how Max Junior raped her and conceived her son. Max Senior paid Flore $2,000 to stay away and sent Max Junior to Miami. Flore now intends to disappear so the Ardins won’t take Pamaxime away from her.

Max Junior drinks beer on the beach and thinks about Bernard (his one true love) and his son. He ventures into the water and feels the sea rising around him. Nozias exits his shack, thinking about his wife and the day she told him that she was pregnant, as well as the day she died. He sees Max Junior and drags him out of the sea. While he is attempting to save Max’s life, Claire sees the commotion from near the lighthouse and decides to return to Gaëlle.

The novel explores themes like the connectedness of small towns, the finality of death, and the difficulties of parenthood in both upper and lower classes. Several events in the novel appear through another character’s perspective, emphasizing the importance of a reliable narrator and how ego can muddy retellings. Max Junior is an example of an unreliable narrator, as he fails to mention he impregnated Flore through rape. 

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