The Possibility of Tenderness by Jason Allen-Paisant audiobook review – meditations on nature and belonging
The poet reconnects with the landscape of the May Day Mountains in Jamaica where he grew up in a personal story of migration, race and rural life
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An award-winning poet living in Roundhay Park, Leeds, Jason Allen-Paisant spent his early childhood living with his grandmother in Coffee Grove, a hilly rural district of Jamaica which was cut off from basic amenities such as electricity and water. Seen through the eyes of a child, Coffee Grove was, he notes, “both a tiny place and a huge planet”. There he developed a close relationship with the local plant life through climbing trees, picking fruit and helping his grandmother harvest yams on the “grung”, the local name for their small plot of land.
Allen-Paisant later yearned for pastures new, moving first to Paris and then to Britain to study at Oxford. His dream of upward mobility had become a reality, yet in the UK he noticed his interactions with nature were few and far between. He came to realise “just how much class keeps people in Britain from the privileges of land and soil and also keeps them from the tenderness that comes with forming kinship with the earth”.
The Possibility of Tenderness is, then, an account of Allen-Paisant’s relationship with the land where he grew up and in his adopted home. Read with warmth and thoughtfulness by the author, the book contains meditations on nature, history, race and the notion of belonging. Allen-Paisant explains how the impulse to surround himself with nature allows him to feel hopeful and “find ways of living through – if not beyond – the constraints of racism”. He notes that while anger at racial injustice can be “inspiring and empowering … this book arises out of a particular impulse: the right to non-anger”.
• Available via Penguin Audio, 8hr 32min
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