More

More

by Austin Clarke

Narrated by Robin Miles

Unabridged — 10 hours, 34 minutes

More

More

by Austin Clarke

Narrated by Robin Miles

Unabridged — 10 hours, 34 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$23.49
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

$24.99 Save 6% Current price is $23.49, Original price is $24.99. You Save 6%.
START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $23.49 $24.99

Overview

Winner of the Giller Prize and the Commonwealth Writers Prize for his novel The Polished Hoe, Austin Clarke is among Canada's most celebrated authors. More follows Barbados native and Toronto resident Idora Morrison, who cannot muster the desire to rise one morning. Her husband has left her, her son has chosen gang life, and societal prejudices have slowly chipped away at her resolve. ". at the height of his literary power, Clarke boldly challenges, and transforms, Canadian sense and sensibility."-Globe Mail

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Prolific Canadian novelist Clarke finally found fame with his 2003 novel, The Polished Hoe. In this follow-up, Clarke stays true to his politically charged style, reporting various manifestations of racism through the life of a Caribbean immigrant living in Canada. Like the author, Idora Morrison is a Barbados native living in Toronto. Her deadbeat husband has left her for New York City, and her beloved teenage son has disappeared into gang life. Unable to cope, Idora loses herself in meandering stories of her life and 25 years in Toronto. She recalls daily prejudice from white Canadians, the embarrassment at her race's media degradation and her rewarding but uneasy friendship with Josephine, a white woman. Finding constant comfort in the Bible story of Jonah and the Whale, Idora finally, painfully, finds her way back to life. An introspective examination of cultural racism and the life of minorities, this detailed (though loaded) narrative should strike a chord with Clarke's audience. (Sept.)

Library Journal

African Canadian writer Clarke is a Giller Prize- and Commonwealth Prize-winning author whose works can be expected to bring the reader into the mind of the protagonist, and he doesn't disappoint with his new novel. The titular "more" is a metaphor for the dreams and aspirations of black Caribbean people looking for prosperity in the great White North: they want "more" education, "more" money, "more" employment opportunities, and higher social status. These are the dreams of the novel's protagonist, Idora Morrison, who works at the University of Toronto as an assistant manager in the kitchen. Idora wants her son BJ to be a university scholar instead of engaging in a life of crime. Clarke cannily uses flashbacks to show that Canadians have a long way to go in addressing race relations issues. VERDICT This tough and affecting novel will shatter American misconceptions about Canadian race relations. A good option for serious readers.—Orville Lloyd Douglas, Brampton, Ont.

Kirkus Reviews

Clarke (The Polished Hoe, 2004, etc.) presents a rant/lament about the West Indian immigrant experience that teeters between dazzling and numbing. Idora Morrison is on the verge of drowning in the maelstrom of Toronto. The "more" that Idora wants hardly seems like much: a brighter future, mainly. Adrift from the Barbados culture that nourished her, she fearfully prays for her teenaged son BJ to "stop dressing like a rapper [and] walking like a penguin." But ever since an Italian boy in their neighborhood accused him of stealing and he was hauled off to the slammer while still a kid, BJ has been trouble. As adolescence descends, posters of Marcus Garvey and Malcolm X appear on his bedroom wall. Assistant Manager of Daytime and Supper Meals at Trinity College, Idora nickel-and-dimes it just above the poverty line, fantasizes about being Naomi Campbell and serves as Assistant Deaconness at the Apostolical Holiness Church of Spiritualism in Christ. Especially at night, she fumes about her husband, "lost or buried somewhere in America, in Brooklyn" seeking employment. To make ends meet, Idora encourages her son to shoplift but then freaks when he embraces the thug life. As the novel commences, BJ is MIA, disappeared into the underworld of violence, larceny and drugs. Four days and many pages later, he's dead-no suspense here-and buried in his Reeboks as Idora mourns. That half-week of agonized anticipation is, basically, the book, a stream-of-consciousness tour of Idora's yearning memory for the islands, her ferocious musings about racism and want, her universal, maternal fears. At times psychedelically kaleidoscopic, at others merely confusing: Experimental plot-sabotage and disregard fornarrative chronology significantly undermine the momentum. Agent: Denise Bukowski/The Bukowski Agency

From the Publisher

A beautifully written exploration of cultural conflicts and one woman’s struggle to find a place for herself emotionally.” — Booklist

“Clarke stays true to his politically charged style . . . An introspective examination of the cultural racism and the life of minorities, [a] detailed . . . narrative.” — Publishers Weekly

“[Clarke] can be expected to bring the reader into the mind of the protagonist, and he doesn’t disappoint with his new novel. . . . This affecting novel will shatter American misconceptions about Canadian race relations. A good option for serious readers.” — Library Journal

“A forceful book . . . at the height of his literary power, Clarke boldly challenges” — Globe and Mail (Toronto)

“More may stand as one of the crowning achievements of Clarke’s career” — Quill & Quire

“[Clarke is] a magnificent story teller.” — NY Caribbean News

Booklist

A beautifully written exploration of cultural conflicts and one woman’s struggle to find a place for herself emotionally.

Quill & Quire

More may stand as one of the crowning achievements of Clarke’s career

Globe and Mail (Toronto)

A forceful book . . . at the height of his literary power, Clarke boldly challenges

NY Caribbean News

[Clarke is] a magnificent story teller.

Booklist

A beautifully written exploration of cultural conflicts and one woman’s struggle to find a place for herself emotionally.

Globe & Mail (Toronto)

"A forceful book . . . at the height of his literary power, Clarke boldly challenges"

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171079284
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 04/23/2010
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews