A novel about the construction of the Panama Canal, following the intersecting lives of the local families fighting to protect their homeland, the West Indian laborers recruited to dig the waterway, and the white Americans who gained profit and glory for themselves.
The novel balances the history with the storytelling as it excavates the connections among these intersecting narratives. Readers will care about these characters even as they learn such things as the segregationist practices that privileged workers from the United States ... Henríquez's smart writing starts at the choices made on a national level but it concentrates on the consequences for towns and families when the hole of the canal causes so many other losses. This absorbing novel expresses the experiences of those often overlooked by dominant narratives, and The Great Divide creatively reminds readers of a different way to ground our histories and stories.
Instead of focusing on only one character, Henriquez threads together the stories of over a dozen people whose lives are profoundly affected by the canal project. This inspired choice suits the scope of the event and hints at even more stories beyond these pages ... a collection of small narratives that together create a moving and powerful epic about the human cost of building the Panama Canal. The novel’s greatest strength is this unrelenting smallness. It insists on the importance of every human life, and illuminates the endless, ordinary, forgotten stories that underlie every pivotal moment in human history.