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Dear readers:
For our sixth anniversary in May 2010, The Caribbean Review of Books has launched a new website at www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com. Antilles has now moved to www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com/antilles — please update your bookmarks and RSS feed. If you link to Antilles from your own blog or website, please update that too!

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Small Axe Literary Prize winners

The editors of Small Axe have asked Antilles to help announce the winners of their first annual Literary Prize for "poetry and short stories from emerging writers whose work centres on regional and diasporic Caribbean themes and concerns."

Short fiction:

First place: Ashley Rousseau, St Andrew, Jamaica
Second place: Alake Pilgrim, D'Abadie, Trinidad and Tobago

Poetry:

First place: Monica Minott, Kingston, Jamaica
Second place: Tanya Shirley, Kingston, Jamaica

The winning entries will be published in Small Axe 32 in July 2010.

The deadline for next year’s literary competition is April 2011. See further details here.

Antilles congratulates the four winners, and we look forward to reading their stories and poems in Small Axe next year. (I'll add that Tanya Shirley is also a CRB contributor--we've published two of her poems and, in our August 2008 issue, her review of Velma Pollard's most recent book.)

Thursday, 1 October 2009

New MEP blog

Dear Antilles readers,

The Caribbean Review of Books' long-time publishing partner, Media & Editorial Projects Ltd (MEP), has just launched a new blog at http://meppublishers.blogspot.com, consolidating posts from each of its individual publication blogs (Discover TnT, Caribbean Beat, and some posts from the Antilles blog).

We invite you to join us for news and views from MEP's suite of publications!

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

Soon come

Dear readers,

As you've probably surmised, Antilles is on hiatus, while I make some crucial decisions about the future of the CRB.

(The CRB website hasn't been updated for quite some time either--never fear, a new site with the magazine's complete archive is in the works.)

Meanwhile, why not check out Repeating Islands, which is doing a rather better job of covering Caribbean literature, art, music etc. than Antilles ever did?

Friday, 12 June 2009

Talking to Nicolette Bethel

Many Antilles readers are familiar with tongues of the ocean, an online poetry journal based in the Bahamas, which was launched in February 2009. Edited by poet and playwright Nicolette Bethel, and focused on poetry from the Caribbean and its diasporas, tongues plans to publish three issues per year, with the contents of each issue appearing gradually week by week.

Soon after the second issue of tongues — dated June 2009 — began appearing, Bethel answered some questions via email about the journal’s background, influences, and modus operandi.

Nicholas Laughlin: Why now? What’s the immediate backstory behind the launch of tongues of the ocean earlier this year?

Nicolette Bethel: It’s a bit personal, a bit professional. Let’s get the professional out of the way first. On 31 December, 2008, I left my position as director of culture for the Bahamas. The immediate goal was to return to academia. However, one of the other goals was to get back into cultural production — something I’d put on hold for any number of reasons for the five years. tongues of the ocean was the first of a series of projects in that regard.

Which brings me to the personal. For the past eight years or so, I’ve been working as a poet, and in the past two I’ve been publishing as one. I’m a little bit lazy, and I’m based in the Bahamas, which makes submitting by regular post a nuisance and a chore when doing it right involves sending along a SASE requiring stamps from the UK and the US, and . . . anyway, it was a waste of time and energy, and besides, it’s a little too much like imperialism, isn’t it? So I prefer submitting only electronically.

Anyway, to cut this long story short, I made a point of submitting only electronically and mostly to online journals. I’d read a few and was impressed by their quality — which had changed tremendously over the past decade, and which now rivals the quality of mid-range print publications. I was also impressed by the sheer geographical range that these journals have — writers from India, Africa, Europe, Australia, and South America jostle with those from the UK and the US. And I was impressed by these journals’ integration of media into their offerings, which made them a substantially different, more alive, animal from the printed page.

What was missing among them? An online Caribbean journal for Caribbean writers with the kind of turn-around and quick publishing record that these other online journals had. And so I thought about establishing one of those.

In the beginning, the idea was really to address the lack of publishing opportunities in the Bahamian market. We have a wide literary community, but it’s rather familial and acritical. What’s more, the written word poets and the spoken word poets were unfamiliar with one another, and there was no sense of being located within a tradition that has a trajectory; there was really only a sense of me-now. I thought a journal would be a very important addition to this community, and a good channel to bring about a wider writers’ community within the Bahamas — as well as allowing people outside the Bahamas access to some of the fine writing that’s going on here. In some ways, the absence of a wide Bahamian diaspora has hurt us globally; we maintain our insularity with great success here. An online journal, being directly inserted into the global conversation, would help to change that a little.

Finally, I wasn’t alone in thinking this way. Last year also saw the launch of the Bahamas International Literary Festival, also known as the Seagrape Literary Festival, and tongues of the ocean was born at a planning meeting. But it’s not a committee venture! We’re affiliated with BILF/Seagrape, and we’re happily partnering with them, but tongues of the ocean is its own master.

NL: Why did you decide that tongues would focus on poetry, rather than making it a more general literary journal?

NB: Purely for convenience. It’s what I have the time to edit. Fiction and non-fiction require far more sustained focus, while poems — especially those best suited for online publication, which are of a limited length and focus — can be edited on the fly. I can read a batch at lunchtime, between classes, during really boring meetings, in that little space between arrival at home and supper, and get the job done. Prose is more than I can handle now.

And anyway, I tend to prefer reading creative prose off the page (blog posts excepted). Poems work well for me on the screen, but I find that the screen demands a certain style of prose that limits the sweep of creativity. Like newspapers, the screen favours short paragraphs, pithy sentences, breezy styles; but my prose preferences tend towards the dense.

If I had another editor who was interested in prose, then we’d consider expanding. But for now, it’s poetry alone.

NL: A few years ago the Bahamian poet Christian Campbell wrote a letter to the CRB, published in our February 2006 issue, in which he argued that Bahamian writers were unfairly ignored by the rest of the Caribbean, and excluded from the region’s literary history. Do you feel that’s still the case? Is addressing that exclusion one of the aims of tongues? And how has the literary establishment (if that’s the right term to use) in the Bahamas reacted to it?

NB: I think Christian’s right to say that Bahamian writers have been ignored by the rest of the Caribbean. Whether that’s unfair or not (given my government’s rejection once again of Carifesta) is a different question; the Bahamian track record with regard to the Caribbean is not a stellar one. But unfair to the writers, perhaps; we are not our governments.

The Bahamas has been excluded from the region’s literary history. I think it’s still the case, as was made clear in Guyana at Carifesta X [in August 2008], where no Bahamians, not even our heavyweights (who have personal connections with the region and who have made their own Caribbean contributions), were programmed. Bahamians have to make real efforts and get pushy to be included in regional literary discussions.

Addressing the exclusion is indeed one of the aims of tongues, though the main purpose was to give Bahamians the opportunity to undergo the discipline of professional publishing.

NL: What has been the great surprise or discovery of working on the journal thus far?

NB: Finding the number of people from across the Caribbean who are writing good poetry. And making connections throughout the diaspora and even around the world. And the number of Bahamians who are writing well.

You know, when I started, when we were gearing up and tongues was no more than a site with instructions about how to submit, a fellow writer asked me if I thought I’d get enough good poetry to fill a journal that published three times a year. I had no idea. I knew there were some good Bahamian poets out there, sprinkled across the archipelago of the Bahamas and over the globe. I even covered my butt by announcing that tongues would reprint previously published poems (after all, how many of those poems are previously published in the Caribbean — or anywhere they can gain a more global readership?), and prepared to fill some of the gaps in the first issue with reprints of some of my favourite Bahamian poems. But the last issue received near to two hundred individual poem submissions from eight different countries! In this issue we’ve already published a poem from Italy, and we’ll be featuring poems from all the way down the archipelago and through the diaspora.

NL: I assume that, like most web publications, tongues keeps a close watch on its visitor statistics. Do you have a sense of where your readers are?

NB: Yes! I’ve told you where the poets come from (from Trinidad to Canada to Nigeria to Italy). The visitors are mostly from North America and the Caribbean (of course), with a goodly number of Europeans and a sprinkling of people from Asia (India to Singapore). Not so many hits from South America or Africa or the Antipodes yet, but give us time — we’ll get there.

NL: In your editorial for the first issue of tongues, you wrote: “I think that we’re (unwittingly?) in the midst of a global literary revolution, a new golden age of literature made possible by a new and radical mode of communication, a.k.a. the Internet.” What are the online literary journals you read most often? What other online resources would you recommend to readers and to writers from the Caribbean?

NB: I’m a big fan of two in particular — Anti- and qarrtsiluni. Both of them are making use of the Internet in a way that punches up the difference between web and print — qarrtsiluni in particular has some interesting characteristics. It’s the most like a blog, its entries are posted two or three times a week, the entries take various forms — art, sound files, video, mixed media — and readers can comment on the poems as they are posted. I stole a whole bunch of ideas from them, most notably the idea of an issue that’s spread out over a period of months; their issues run for as long as they need them to, and at the end they close the issue with an editorial and contributors’ notes. They have themed issues and guest editors, and they have got to the point where they’ve got a sound file accompanying every written piece. At the end of two of the most recent issues, when they closed the issue, they podcast the whole thing!

Anti- works in a slightly different, perhaps a little more traditional, way. Like qarrtsiluni and tongues it uses blogging software (Wordpress, to be exact), but it’s more structured and more stable than qarrtsiluni. Part of the fun of qarrtsiluni is the almost chaotic nature of the journal, the edginess, the not-knowing what to expect (from the themes, from the guest editors, from the managing editors) — you’re always surprised. Anti- has a structure that is predictable enough to brand it as something special. It isn’t as interactive as qarrtsiluni — you can’t comment on its posts. It’s not entirely predictable; it publishes issues as it sees fit, but in between the issues (which remain stable for two to four weeks) it publishes poems by featured poets. Those poems are left live for two weeks each, and I was fortunate enough to be chosen as one of those poets. I stole the idea of leaving poems live for a set period of time from Anti-, as well as the idea of using blogging software to create a mood and a tone for the journal.

Other online journals that I frequent are The Avatar Review, which is an annual journal, fairly established and very good; and Soundzine, which is all about the sound of the words on the screen (every poem published in Soundzine is accompanied by a sound file). No Tell Motel is another online journal that makes the most of the web, publishing a single poet a week with a new poem for each day from Monday to Friday; and then there’s also Eclectica, which, as it suggests, is, well, eclectic. I stole the idea of poems written for prompts from them.

There are huge resources out there for writers. Those specifically focused on Caribbean work are harder to find, especially online — which is why tongues came into being. Sometimes I feel bad that I’m not very open to considering poems from beyond the diaspora. But then, the diaspora casts a very wide net (the Caribbean being the world in a basin), so I don’t have to be as mean as I think.

So just so readers know how tongues works, and how what was culled from other online publications found its way into the journal: we publish three issues a year, in February, June, and October. Each issue has a fourteen-week cycle or thereabouts. Two poems go live every Sunday, and when the issue closes they’re replaced by a static page that gives the list of the poems from the issue, the cover art, the contributors’ notes, and the editorial, all in one page of linked contents, as is standard in online journals. Each poem can collect comments for up to three months, but the window for collecting comments eventually closes. And what we really want is a mix of the written and the spoken word. The spoken word’s taking some time to get off the ground, but I trust that as time goes on (as happened with qarrtsiluni) people’ll get the hang of it.

NL: As you mentioned earlier, you are a practising poet, and in fact the CRB was privileged to publish one of your poems in our November 2008 issue. How — if at all — has working on tongues changed the way you think about your own writing, your approach to your own poems?

NB: I don’t know whether working on tongues has changed the way I think about my own work. I don’t even know if it has changed the way I submit my work — I think that the process of submitting and writing has shaped what I do for tongues. Being a working poet (and being a moderator on an online poetry workshop) has certainly made me a better editor. Quite probably, as time goes on the two roles will affect one another more. I try not to be an editor when I write — the editing eye’s too constricting — but whether the separation can be sustained over time remains to be seen.

NL: What three poems would you select from those in your inaugural issue to represent the scope of tongues?

NB: This is a hard one! Well, I’d have to pick one of the spoken word pieces, but which one I don’t know; I like them all. So it’ll be a blind pick, and I’ll go with the one that generated the most comments: “Crack Conch and a Hot Guinness”, by Ishmael Andrew Smith.

As for the rest, they’re also pretty blind picks. I could pick something Bahamian, or something from the region, or something from outside the region; or I could pick something by a woman, or something by a man; or I could pick something in a form (like haiku or — you know this one better than me — an ourobouric poem) or I could pick something strong and powerful, or something small and meditative. Dear lord! What shall I do? Put the titles in a hat and pick them out, trusting that I’ll get a contrast (because I like them all).

So that’s what I’ll do — or the next best thing. I’ll refresh the page, and see how the writers’ names are randomly shuffled, and pick two more. And they are: an untitled poem by the Canadian Sheila Brooke, who sent in a poem for catch a fire (poems written according to prompts), and “Standing in Line”, a prose love poem by Muhammad Muwakil.

As for the rest — people will just have to go see for themselves.

Sunday, 3 May 2009

Freedom to write



On 3 May, 1991, a group of African journalists at a UNESCO conference in Namibia issued what has come to be called the Windhoek Declaration on press freedom. "The establishment, maintenance, and fostering of an independent, pluralistic and free press," it reads, "is essential to the development and maintenance of democracy in a nation." Two and a half years later, the United Nations General Assembly recognised that document's importance by declaring 3 May World Press Freedom Day.

Today, World Press Freedom Day 2009, the international writers' association PEN launches its Freedom to Write in the Americas campaign, which "aims to highlight the persecution of writers and journalists and the issue of impunity in the region, provide direct support to colleagues in trouble, and raise awareness of trends of repression and censorship threatening writers' rights." Twenty-nine PEN centres around the world are participating, and over fifty writers (including Derek Walcott, Junot Diaz, and Paul Auster) have signed a "Declaration in Defense of the Freedom to Write in the Americas".

To start with, the PEN campaign is paying close attention to Mexica, Cuba, Venezuela, Peru, Colombia, and Nicaragua, "selected on the basis of the volume of attacks and severity of persecution against writers in recent years." This page offers suggestions for anyone interested in taking action, and the main campaign page gives details of specific cases that PEN is monitoring.

In the Caribbean, like everywhere else, we need our writers--not just journalists, but novelists, poets, playwrights, historians, critics--to ask unpopular questions, reveal uncomfortable facts, and compel us to consider those crucial matters that our political leaders would rather we ignored. Spare a few minutes today not just to look at the PEN campaign page but to consider all the possible threats to our writers' freedom of expression--and all the ways we readers can demonstrate our support.

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

A message to CRB readers

Dear Caribbean Review of Books subscribers and readers,

You must have noticed by now that your February 2009 CRB hasn't arrived. I'm writing now to give you an update on the status of the magazine.

There is bad and good news. The bad news is that the CRB's finances continue to be shaky. As a small literary non-profit, we've struggled to cover our costs over the last five years. And like many magazines around the world, we've been affected by global financial developments over the past six to nine months. Our modest advertising revenue is down, and most potential funders have seen the value of their endowments--and therefore their funding power--decrease.

In 2008, thanks to generous support from the Prince Claus Fund and also our individal subscribers, the CRB published four bumper issues, with reviews of 85 books. But at the start of 2009, we found ourselves with insufficient funds on hand to publish our February 2009 issue. Despite sustained fundraising efforts, that continued to be the case until a few days ago.

But here is the good news: the CRB was recently offered what is effectively a loan that will allow us to print our (now very late) February issue, as well as the one after that. That will see us through to the middle of the year, by which time we expect various other funding possibilities to bear fruit.

So I want to apologise that your February 2009 issue has not yet arrived in the mail, but I also want to assure you that it is now, finally, on its way. We've slipped well off our usual publication schedule, but we're working hard to catch up. You'll get your February CRB in a few weeks, and your May issue not too long after that. If all goes well, your August issue will be right on time!

Thanks again for your patience and your generous support. The CRB depends on our paid subscribers for a crucial portion of our income, and we're grateful to every single one of you.

Sunday, 4 January 2009

Links, links, links

Happy new year, dear readers--I hope 2009 is treating you well so far. After my year-end break, I'll gradually ease myself back into regular posting here over the next few days. A handful of literary links, to start.

- Weekend America spoke to Derek Walcott recently about politics and poetry--specifically, about Barack Obama's interest in poetry. Walcott described the process of writing "Forty Acres", his poem in honour of the American president-elect:

"The way I knew [the poem] was going to perhaps finish itself was finding the rhyme which sometimes happens in a poem, like crowd and plowed. Once that happened, I saw the furrow that the plow had made. Same thing as if say a limousine were going through a crowd it would make a furrow of a kind and the turnover of the dirt would be the separation of people before the president's car, which of course becomes a plow, so the idea of the design of the whole endeavor of the plowing becomes the endeavor of shaping the flag, with all the states, confederate and union together, led by this plowman who is the young president."

- More Walcottiana: in today's Stabroek News, Al Creighton reports on a recent BBC programme in which Walcott answered questions from a studio audience and discussed his masterwork Omeros.

- A couple of months ago I linked to Ian Buruma's review of The World Is What It Is in the New York Review of Books. The latest edition of the NYRB includes two letters responding to the piece, from V.S. Naipaul's onetime lover Margaret Murray and his onetime friend Paul Theroux.

- In his column in today's Newsday, Andre Bagoo laments the fact that--at least in Trinidad and Tobago--"boys don't read":

... for some boys it is almost an indictment against their masculinity. Books, of any kind, are alien objects. They contain information, maybe some pictures, but they dare not been seen to contain that most catholic of qualities: pleasure.

- And Marlon James--whose second novel The Book of Night Women is one of the titles I'm most eagerly anticipating this year--returns to blogging with some new-year thoughts.