Description

Book Synopsis

Less than an hour after Millington receives his permanent resident visa, he wonders if his husband Jay would now end their marriage. And Jay has multiple reasons to. Millington is an ex-Methodist minister, who once believed he could be celibate. When he fled Caribbean Methodism and came to Montreal, he thought he'd resolved the issues that made him leave, but he comes to understand that psychological trauma, childhood conditioning, parental and community expectations and his own need for community and family valorization are not easily exorcised. The third installment in the No Safeguards quartet of novels.



Trade Review
It is a fairly boisterous atmosphere we are drawn into at the outset - and it comes in welcome sharp contrast to that trend of moody psycho-sexual novels about two or three lonesome people in downtown high-rises or sitting on rock cliffs in lonely coastal fishing towns. I mean, it's okay to ponder over just-released criminal pedophile uncles in isolated towns, but there is a world outside worth talking about as well, and that is what makes Thomas' novel invigorating, intelligent and persistent about the original sin of religious doctrinairism. -- Montreal Serai
Complex questions regarding the queerness of one's status emerge in Easily Fooled. These questions take us beyond a focus on sexuality as the dominant or singular attribute of queerness in the archipelago. The novel attends to how one's immigrant status dictates how Caribbean peoples might be queered in diaspora. -- Small Axe

Easily Fooled

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    £17.95

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    RRP £19.95 – you save £2.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 30 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by H. Nigel Thomas


      View other formats and editions of Easily Fooled by H. Nigel Thomas

      Publisher: Guernica Editions,Canada
      Publication Date: 01/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9781771835817, 978-1771835817
      ISBN10: 1771835818

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Less than an hour after Millington receives his permanent resident visa, he wonders if his husband Jay would now end their marriage. And Jay has multiple reasons to. Millington is an ex-Methodist minister, who once believed he could be celibate. When he fled Caribbean Methodism and came to Montreal, he thought he'd resolved the issues that made him leave, but he comes to understand that psychological trauma, childhood conditioning, parental and community expectations and his own need for community and family valorization are not easily exorcised. The third installment in the No Safeguards quartet of novels.



      Trade Review
      It is a fairly boisterous atmosphere we are drawn into at the outset - and it comes in welcome sharp contrast to that trend of moody psycho-sexual novels about two or three lonesome people in downtown high-rises or sitting on rock cliffs in lonely coastal fishing towns. I mean, it's okay to ponder over just-released criminal pedophile uncles in isolated towns, but there is a world outside worth talking about as well, and that is what makes Thomas' novel invigorating, intelligent and persistent about the original sin of religious doctrinairism. -- Montreal Serai
      Complex questions regarding the queerness of one's status emerge in Easily Fooled. These questions take us beyond a focus on sexuality as the dominant or singular attribute of queerness in the archipelago. The novel attends to how one's immigrant status dictates how Caribbean peoples might be queered in diaspora. -- Small Axe

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