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1. Forthcoming Young Adult novel by Diana McCaulay


Papillote Press is delighted to announce the forthcoming publication of Gone to Drift by the award-winning Jamaican writer Diana McCaulay. This young adult novel, which won second prize in the CODE’s Burt Award for Caribbean Literature (2015), will be published on 29 February 2016.
Gone to Drift tells the story of a 12-year-old Jamaican boy, Lloyd, and his search for his beloved grandfather, a fisherman who is lost at sea. An adventure story about a boy confronted with difficult moral choices it will inspire its readers to choose bravery over cowardice and to follow their hearts. 
"This is my first novel for young adults," says McCaulay, "and as reading meant so much to me as a teenager, I'm hoping Gone to Drift will be read and enjoyed by many Caribbean young people. I wanted to pay tribute to our long tradition of fishermen, and I'm so grateful the Burt Award has made that possible. I'm also thrilled that Gone to Drift will be published by Papillote Press, a Caribbean publishing house which I've long admired." 
Gone to Drift follows on from McCaulay’s two acclaimed novels, Dog-Heart (2010) and Huracan (2012) and is built on her 2012 Regional Commonwealth prize-winning short story, The Dolphin Catchers  (Granta Online). As well as writing, McCaulay founded and, for many years, ran the Jamaica Environment Trust (JET); she was also a popular newspaper columnist. 
As Pamela Mordecai, author of The Red Jacket, sa ys: "Gone to Drift  is a love story about Lloyd's deep affection for his grandfather, and about the author's deep love for Jamaica, its land and seas. A Jamaican coming-of-age story - realistic, often funny and deeply touching - it’s a story for adventurous boys and girls, and for grownups too." 
CODE's Burt Award for Caribbean Literature is an annual award given to English-language literary works for young adults (aged 12 through 18) written by Caribbean authors. Established by CODE - a Canadian NGO that has been supporting literacy and learning for over 55 years - with the generous support of the Literary Prizes Foundation and in partnership with the Bocas Lit Fest, the Award aims to provide  engaging and culturally relevant books for young people across the Caribbean.
Founded in 2011, the Bocas Lit Fest administers major literary prizes for Caribbean authors and organises the annual NGC Bocas Lit Fest, Trinidad and Tobago’s premier literary festival.
Papillote Press, based in Dominica and London, specialises in books about Dominica and the wider Caribbean. “I love this story. It entwines a tale of modern Jamaica with memories of the old ways of the sea. The reader follows Lloyd’s desperate search for his grandfather every step of the way.” says Polly Pattullo, publisher of Papillote Press.
For further information please contact the publisher: info@papillotepress.co.uk

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2. sx salon, issue 15

small axe


sx salon, issue 15 (February 2014)
Introduction and Table of Contents

Our first issue of 2014 tackles the concept of Chinese Caribbean literature with a special section of essays, interviews, and creative writing that approach this proposed literary category from different locations. Opening the discussion, Anne-Marie Lee-Loy asks the following “intrinsically intertwined” questions: “Is there such a thing as Chinese Caribbean literature? What would make such literature identifiably ‘Chinese Caribbean’?” And these questions haunt the other pieces in this issue’s special section.  In the two included interviews, Easton Lee speaks with Tzarina Prater about his early years and the influence they now have on his work while Patricia Powell discusses with Stephen Narain the curiosity that led her to writing The Pagoda, a novel that Lee-Loy notes troubles the impulse to constitute Chinese Caribbean literature by author origins. Powell reveals:

The novel grew out of a desire to know more about home, to know Jamaica’s history, to understand the Chinese experience in Jamaica, the complexities of otherness for them—people who are neither black nor white. I wanted to know their particular experiences of exile and immigration and displacement, their experiences of community and home there on the island.

These complexities arise in the two creative pieces in the special section, both of which return to the ubiquitous, though often overlooked, Mr. Chin character. While Victor Chang’s short story marries the unimaginable and the expected occurring on and to Mr. Chin’s property, Staceyann Chin’s poem to her father voices Mr. Chin’s progeny, the daughter now diasporic citizen who refuses to forget. Tao Leigh Goffe’s article closes the section with a consideration of six writers, including Staceyann Chin, who are “thrice diasporized,” that is, “shaped by the experiences of the African diaspora, the Asian diaspora, and the Caribbean diaspora.”

Via the writers included in this special section, this discussion seeks to not only contribute to but also complexify the slowly growing acknowledgement of a significant body of work from the Caribbean and the Caribbean diaspora.

Our issue also features five new book reviews as well as creative work from Cyril Dabydeen, Colin Robinson, Reuel Ben Lewi, and Rajiv Mohabir. The table of contents is included below.

This issue of sx salon is dedicated to the memory and legacy of Stuart Hall (3 February 1932–10 February 2014).

Kelly Baker Josephs


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3. Review: Boundaries. Shop Local: Holiday Sales. On-Line Floricanto Mid-December




Review: Elizabeth Nunez. Boundaries. NY: Akashic Books, 2011.
ISBN-13: 978-1-61775-033-5

Michael Sedano

In her novel, Boundaries, Elizabeth Nunez continues Anna’s story after Anna In-Between. The author sets Boundaries in New York City in a neatly packaged mirror image of the earlier novel. There, Anna visits her family on a Caribbean island where Anna’s emigrant culture shock charges the novel and informs a view of colonial minds. Now, Anna’s parents travel to New York for mother’s surgery. Anna’s new homeland indeed is a brave new world that has such creatures in it as her rotten ex.

Everything has boundaries Nunez points out. Political types would remind a critic of the dialectic, things defined in terms of the other, often producing chiasmus. For Anna, it’s the black run nation persistently exercising colonial values; tea at 4, class awareness, people emotionally isolated from one another yet occupying the same space. This is her family. Did her mother never hug and kiss Anna because the Queen never hugged or kissed Charles and Anne, not even in private? Anna believes a daughter has to learn to love her mother, motherly love an oxymoron, or at least a rare mystery.

The bewildered, dutiful child has problems at work. Anna’s a publisher. The head of a large house’s writers of color imprint. For Anna, her job is her opportunity to bring literary fiction to her readers, break the boundary between black literature and good literature. Publishers and booksellers, however, force writers into an internal colony. A white critic writes a tome on John Milton, the bookstores sell it under General Literature. A noted black scholar writes a book on John Milton, the bookstore sells it under Black Literature.

Anna’s a crusader for crossing boundaries. Her conviction that literature shapes a world’s view of other people is her driving principle. Her supervisor has no concern for Anna’s principled view. Sales is what counts and Anna finds herself surrounded by mercenaries who want personal advancement above all, especially lurid covers that sell books, even if the writer feels betrayed by bodice-ripper art. How does one adapt when the world of work erects a looming boundary between one’s principles and values or keeping a cushy dream job?

Some boundaries appear to have only one side. Love and no longer love, for example. Anna’s divorce haunts her. This is what makes Boundaries a book men must read. In Anna’s marriage, a boundary erupted between a man who does not grow and a woman who does. Must.

The dating woman is “fun.” The married woman takes on responsibilities: for household, building a future, becoming the woman marriage obliges she become. Him, he tells the woman he married i

3 Comments on Review: Boundaries. Shop Local: Holiday Sales. On-Line Floricanto Mid-December, last added: 12/14/2011
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