Book Bulletin

Bocas Book Bulletin: August 2022

A monthly roundup of Caribbean literary news, curated by the NGC Bocas Lit Fest and published in the Sunday Express.

New Releases

Love the Dark Days (Peepal Tree Press), the debut book from India-born Trinidadian writer Ira Mathur, weaves a complex story of family, class, identity, belonging, and writerly ambition, ranging from India to Britain to the Caribbean. Presented as a memoir but drawing on the techniques of fiction, the book describes a decades-long attempt by the narrator, nicknamed Poppet, to come to terms with herself and her adopted home, Trinidad, while negotiating the intricate anxieties of her hybrid family. Interlaced through the main narrative is a series of chapters following Poppet as she visits the late Nobel laureate Derek Walcott in St. Lucia — offering a double portrait of the elder writer as sacred monster, and the younger grappling with the confidence to lay herself bare on the page.

 

Where Dogs Bark with Their Tails (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), the award-winning debut novel by Guadeloupean-French Estelle-Sarah Brulle (translated by Julia Grawemeyer) moves between the rural countryside of Guadeloupe, the colonial city of Pointe-à-Pitre, and metropolitan France, unravelling an epic family story centred on the character of Aunt Antoine. The legacies of colonialism, forbidden love across boundaries of race and class, and the power of stories to “reconcile past, present, and future” are at the heart of this vivid narrative.

 

Border Zone (Bloodaxe Books), the new poetry collection by Guyana-born John Agard, explores historic and present-day transatlantic connections between the Caribbean and Britain, through diverse forms: a narrative poem of romance, sonnets in the voice of the restless 18th-century rogue Casanova, calypso poems, and even a sequence of gardening poems set during the COVID-19 lockdown.

 

Selected Poems (Penguin) by Linton Kwesi Johnson is a new, expanded edition of an essential text, offering a four-decade survey of the groundbreaking work of the Jamaica-born, Britain-based poet. Early classics like the timeless “Inglan Is a Bitch” rub shoulders with new work from the past decade, while an introduction by journalist Gary Younge explains how LKJ’s “electrifying fusion of oral verse, Jamaican speech, radical politics, and reggae rhythms” has influenced poets, musicians, and activists since the 1970s.

 

Claude McKay: The Making of a Black Bolshevik (Columbia University Press), a new study by historian Winston James, focuses on the political life of the renowned Jamaican writer and activist — “a central figure in Caribbean literature, the Harlem Renaissance, and the Black radical tradition.” James describes how McKay’s Jamaican upbringing, followed by his early experience of racism in the United States and his contact with figures like Marcus Garvey, shaped his political consciousness, and drew him eventually to revolutionary socialism.

 

Writers of Dominica, 1920–2020 (Emmanuel Publishing House), compiled by Alick Lazare, offers a broad, rich overview of the literature of Dominica over the past century, combining a critical study of Jean Rhys’s novel Wide Sargasso Sea with selections from 44 other writers of prose and poetry hailing from the Nature Isle — following “the growth of a national literature from the unstable and insecure social conditions during the colonial era to a more secure and confident society that prevailed in the post-independence period.”

Awards & Prizes

Writer H. Nigel Thomas, who was born in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and migrated to Canada in 1968, has been named the 2022 winner of the Canada Council for the Arts Molson Prize for Arts. Founded in 1964, awarded annually, and open to citizens and permanent residents of Canada, the Molson Prizes are “intended to encourage continuing contribution to the cultural and intellectual heritage of Canada,” and come with an award of CDN$50,000. Thomas is the author of numerous books, including novels, short story collections, and poetry.

 

The poetry collection Mother Muse by Jamaican Lorna Goodison has been shortlisted for the 2022 Derek Walcott Prize — “offered annually for a book of poetry by a non-US citizen published anywhere in the world.” Now in its third year, the prize comes with a cash award of US$1,000. The winner will be announced on 13 October.

 

No fewer than seven writers with links to the Caribbean have been named fellows of the Royal Society of Literature, as part of a 2022 cohort of nearly one hundred. They include Malika Booker, Fred D’Aguiar, Kit de Waal, Ferdinand Dennis, Hannah Lowe, Karen McCarthy Woolf, and Monique Roffey — with roots in Guyana, Grenada, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, and Trinidad and Tobago. Among the additional honorary fellows “who have made a significant contribution to the advancement of literature as publishers, agents, librarians, booksellers or producers” is Polly Patullo, founder of the Dominica-based Papillote Press. And the winner of the RSL’s 2022 Benson Medal, recognising lifetime achievement in literature, is writer and storyteller Sandra Agard, born in Britain to Guyanese parents. Founded in 1820 and based in the UK, the RSL is a charity which works to “reward literary merit and excite literary talent.”

 

The 2022 Bocas Lit Fest Children’s Book Prize opened for entries on 20 June, with a submission deadline of 31 August, 2022. Sponsored this year by the Wainwright Family, the prize recognises an outstanding English-language children’s book (for readers between ages 7 and 12) written by a Caribbean author. It comes with a cash award of US$1,000. For entry guidelines and more information, visit www.bocaslitfest.com/awards/childrens-book-prize.

Caribbean Bestsellers

Independent bookshop Paper Based (paperbased.org) shares its top-selling Caribbean titles for the past month:

 

  1. When We Were Birds, by Ayanna Lloyd Banwo
  2. The Bread the Devil Knead, by Lisa Allen-Agostini
  3. Pleasantview, by Celeste Mohammed
  4. The Most Magnificent!, by Jeunanne Alkins and Neala Bhagwansingh
  5. Love the Dark Days, by Ira Mathur

Other News

The semi-final rounds of the 2022 First Citizens National Poetry Slam, with the theme “A Season of Change,” will be televised on TTT on Sunday 21 and Sunday 28 August. Twenty semi-finalists will compete in two batches to advance to the finals in October, and vie for the most coveted title in Caribbean spoken word. 2022 marks the 10th anniversary of the slam, which offers a prize of TT$50,000 to the successful champion.

 

As Trinidad and Tobago marks the 60th anniversary of Independence in August, the NGC Bocas Lit Fest will soon launch a special programme of events bringing together newly commissioned writing by T&T authors that reflects on our past and future, and a series of discussions and readings that focus on recent books asking questions about the meaning of belonging and citizenship. This month-long programme will run from Independence Day on 31 August to Republic Day on 24 September — an “Independence season” that will also offer a curated selection of video content from the NGC Bocas Lit Fest archives. Further information will be available at www.bocaslitfest.com in the coming weeks.

 

Also timed to the Independence anniversary, the NGC Bocas Lit Fest recently launched a new 100 Caribbean Books That Made Us podcast, featuring contemporary writers from T&T exploring classic books of the past. The series launched in July with novelist Kevin Jared Hosein tackling the celebrated novel No Pain Like This Body by the late Harold Sonny Ladoo. Further episodes will be released monthly at www.bocaslitfest.com/books-that-made-us/podcast.