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Trinity Sight

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Winner of the 2020 Southwest Book Award

"Our people are survivors," Calliope's great-grandmother once told her of their Puebloan roots—could Bisabuela's ancient myths be true?

Anthropologist Calliope Santiago awakens to find herself in a strange and sinister wasteland, a shadow of the New Mexico she knew. Empty vehicles litter the road. Everyone has disappeared—or almost everyone. Calliope, heavy-bellied with the twins she carries inside her, must make her way across this dangerous landscape with a group of fellow survivors, confronting violent inhabitants, in search of answers. Long-dead volcanoes erupt, the ground rattles and splits, and monsters come to ominous life. The impossible suddenly real, Calliope will be forced to reconcile the geological record with the heritage she once denied if she wants to survive and deliver her unborn babies into this uncertain new world.

Rooted in indigenous oral-history traditions and contemporary apocalypse fiction, Trinity Sight asks readers to consider science versus faith and personal identity versus ancestral connection. Lyrically written and utterly original, Trinity Sight brings readers to the precipice of the end-of-times and the hope for redemption.

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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2019

      DEBUT Poet Givhan blends Puebloan, Zuni, and Mexican American cultures in this searing postapocalyptic rumination on motherhood, genocide, and environmentalism. After a horrible car crash caused by a blinding red light, anthropologist Calliope Santiago regains consciousness in a New Mexico she doesn't recognize, filled with preternaturally violent humans, volcanic eruptions, and chaos following the disappearance of thousands of people. The pregnant (with twins) heroine joins forces with her next-door neighbor, a seven-year-old Korean American with the Sight; Calliope's aunt's partner; an adventurous white college student; and an attractive Zuni-Mexican American man sent to guide her and find her missing husband and son. This magical realist tale reveres the power of nature, exploring what could happen if Earth punished humankind for the atrocities committed against it. Poetry imbues every page with power and truth, and the intense plot is propelled by fully realized characters and a majestically primal setting. VERDICT This harrowing debut with Southwestern sensibility depicts the dangers of destroying our planet and questions whether mythology is an apt term to describe Indigenous beliefs. Purchase where Rebecca Roanhorse's Trail of Lightning and Silvia Moreno-Garcia's Gods of Jade and Shadow are popular. [See Editors' Picks, "Fall Fireworks," p. 25.]--Shelley M. Diaz, BookOps, NYPL & BPL

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2019
      Brace yourself: The end of the world is coming. Or is it? A multilayered, Indigenous-inflected version of the apocalypse that resists predictability. Calliope Santiago is an anthropologist and a young mother heavily pregnant with twins the day the Earth changes forever. As she's driving home from her job as a professor at the University of New Mexico, there's a blinding flash, and Calliope crashes her car. When she comes to, everyone else is gone, rapture-style. Well, almost everyone--Calliope's 6-year-old neighbor, Eunjoo, also remains, inexplicably. The two flee Albuquerque, where long-dormant volcanoes, newly awakened, are burying the city in molten lava, and head for Calliope's aunt's hacienda in the Gila Mountains to the south. On the way, Calliope and Eunjoo amass an unlikely crew of fellow left-behinds, each with his or her role to play as their odyssey unfolds. The author of several poetry collections, first-time novelist Givhan employs Southwestern Puebloan mythology to inform the plot--as when Kachina dolls come to life as the monstrous and deadly Suuke, half-gods, half-monsters hell-bent on destroying Calliope and her companions. Givhan also makes contemporary connections, as when she invokes Kennewick Man, the ancient skeleton discovered in Washington state in the 1990s, and refers to the years of controversy between scientists, the U.S. government, and Native American tribes before the remains were eventually repatriated. Another character, Mara, who's the partner of Calliope's missing aunt, witnessed the birth of the atomic bomb in the 1940s when her father was sent to Los Alamos to work on the top-secret Manhattan project. Mara often links the nuclear terror of her childhood and the rending they're witnessing near the end of her life. Givhan's themes are complex and occasionally compete with the twists and turns of the plot for a reader's attention. Still, texture and nuance are rare among disaster narratives and are welcome here. A testament to the strength of women and girls with a side of philosophy, myth, and metaphysics.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2019
      Mexican American anthropologist Calliope Santiago, heavily pregnant with twins, is driving home from work when she sees a brilliant flash of light and crashes her car. She and the babies are not hurt, and the car has only minor damage, but Calliope's sense that something is wrong is ratcheted up. The cars on the road are empty, her cell phone doesn't work, and neither does the radio. When she arrives home, she finds her house empty; her husband and her young son are nowhere to be seen. Her neighborhood is just as abandoned. The only person she encounters is six-year-old Eunjoo, her next-door neighbor's child. Calliope takes Eunjoo and ventures to her aunt's house further south. On this journey, Calliope experiences events that cannot be explained by science and remind her of stories her great-grandmother told her. Calliope faces great danger in her search for her family while reckoning with science, faith, and stories. Poet Givhan's first novel is a unique take on dystopian fiction, weaving the culture of Pueblo peoples into an adventurous, apocalyptic page-turner. Lyrical writing and exceptional plotting make this #OwnVoices novel highly recommended for all fiction collections.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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