A House for Miss Pauline: 'One of the Caribbean's finest writers' Monique Roffey
By (Author) Diana McCaulay
Dialogue
Dialogue Books
27th May 2025
27th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Speculative fiction
Contemporary horror and ghost stories
Hardback
320
Width 162mm, Height 236mm, Spine 32mm
517g
'One of the Caribbean's finest writers . . . Her novels are building blocks of the current Caribbean canon and will be read for years to come.' Monique Roffey, author of THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH
'History's crimes unfurl in this magical story . . . McCaulay's immaculate, breathtaking writing carries it with poise and conviction. This novel is poetry' Lisa Allen-Agostini, author of THE BREAD THE DEVIL KNEAD'Where has Diana McCaulay been all my reading life . . . A profound and beautiful novel of encounters with the past and atonements in the present' Julia Alvarez, author of THE CEMETERY OF UNTOLD STORIESWhen the stones of her home begin to rattle and call out to her in the quiet of the night, Pauline Sinclair knows she will not live to see her 100th birthday.From educating herself through stolen books to becoming one of the most successful ganja farmers in the area and raising a family, Pauline has lived a life on her own terms in Mason Hall, a rural Jamaican village. Yet these whispering walls promise to topple the foundations of her security and exhume Pauline's many buried secrets, including the mysterious disappearance of the man who came to claim the very land on which she built her home, stone by stone, from the ruins of a plantation.Compelled to make peace before she dies, Pauline decides to leave the only home she has ever known on a final, desperate mission to uncover truths she could never have imagined . . .Lyrical, funny, eerie and profound, A House for Miss Pauline tells a timely and nuanced tale, infused with the patois and natural beauty of Jamaica, which questions who owns the land on which our identities are forged.History's crimes unfurl in this magical story - a story as Jamaican as the stones in the title - and Diana McCaulay's immaculate, breathtaking writing carries it with poise and conviction. This novel is poetry. -- Lisa Allen-Agostini, author of THE BREAD THE DEVIL KNEAD
One of the Caribbean's finest writers . . . Her novels are building blocks of the current Caribbean canon and will be read for years to come. -- Monique Roffey, author of THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH
Where has Diana McCaulay been all my reading life . . . A profound and beautiful novel of encounters with the past and atonements in the present. -- Julia Alvarez, author of THE CEMETERY OF UNTOLD STORIES
McCaulay weaves an intimate family story with the history of a community and reveals how past crimes - both private and collective - resonate into the present. Told with elegant prose and the musicality of Jamaican patwah, this immersive story intrigued me, gripped me and then thoroughly enchanted me. Diana McCaulay is a fantastic storyteller. -- Lisa Smith, author of JAMAICA ROAD
Diana McCaulay is a Jamaican environmental activist and the award-winning author of five novels. Winner of the Gold Musgrave Medal, Jamaica's highest award for lifetime achievement across the arts and sciences; twice Winner of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for the Caribbean region (in 2022 and in 2012), she has also been shortlisted for the IMPAC Dublin Award, among other nominations, and is the winner of the Watson, Little 50 Prize for unrepresented writers aged 50+.