Cliff's first published work was the book
Claiming an Identity They Taught Me to Despise, which covered the ways she experienced racism and prejudice. In 1984, Cliff published
Abeng, a
semi-autobiographical novel that explores topics of female sexual subjectivity and Jamaican identity. Next was
The Land of Look Behind: Prose and Poetry (1985), which uses the Jamaican folk world, its landscape and
culture to examine identity. Cliff's second novel,
No Telephone to Heaven, was published in 1987. It continues the story of Clare Savage from
Abeng, exploring the need to reclaim a suppressed African past. Her works were also in a collection edited by
Gloria Anzaldúa called
Making Face, Making Soul: Creative and Critical Writing by Feminists of Color (1990). From 1990 on, Cliff's work took a more global focus, especially with her first collection of short stories,
Bodies of Water. In 1993 she published her third novel,
Free Enterprise, and in 1998 she published another collection of short stories,
The Store of a Million Items. Both works continue her pursuit of readdressing historical injustices. She continued to work throughout the 2000s, releasing several collections of essays and short stories including
If I Could Write This in Fire (2008) and
Everything Is Now: New and Collected Short Stories (2009). Her final novel,
Into The Interior, was published in 2010. Cliff translated into English the works of several writers, poets and creatives such as Argentinean poet
Alfonsina Storni; Spanish poet
Federico García Lorca and Italian poet
Pier Paolo Pasolini. She held academic positions at several colleges including
Trinity College and
Emory University. == Works ==