As we end our 2020 series of events and winter sets in, it’s a perfect time to draw from some memories of the year through the warmth of the Caribbean. We’re
delighted to share with you highlights from authors who have also participated in Trinidad and Tobago’s NGC Bocas Lit Fest, which is celebrating its tenth anniversary this year.
The festival is a lively celebration of books, writers, writing and ideas, with a Caribbean focus and international scope. It brings together readers and writers from
Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean, and the wider world for readings, performances, workshops, discussions, film screenings, and more. Most events are free and open to the public.
In addition, the prestigious OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature is awarded each year at the festival. We wish the Bocas team and everyone who has been part of it for
these first ten years our warmest congratulations.
You can find out more about the Bocas Lit Fest here: bocaslitfest.com
This year, Your Local Arena has featured these authors who have been part of Bocas in its first decade: Jacqueline Bishop, Danielle Boodoo-Fortuné, Bernardine Evaristo, Colin Grant, Anthony Joseph, Hannah Lowe, Vladimir Lucien, Roger Robinson, Monique Roffey and Olive Senior — as well as Fred D’Aguiar, Linton Kwesi Johnson and Derek Walcott on film. Your Local Arena contributors include three winners of the overall OCM Bocas Prize: Monique Roffey in 2013, Vladimir Lucien in 2015 and Olive Senior in 2016.
We’re delighted to direct you to the contributions from these Bocas authors here, as well as to share an exclusive audio reading by acclaimed author Olive Senior. Listen to her ever-popular poem ‘Colonial Girl’s School’ here.
Olive Senior is the prizewinning author of 18 books of poetry, fiction, non-fiction and children’s literature. Her work is taught internationally and has been widely translated.
She is a winner of the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature among others, and has been shortlisted for Canada’s Governor-General’s award for poetry.
A Jamaican by birth, she now lives in Toronto but returns frequently to the Caribbean, which remains central to her work. A book of her Pandemic Poems which she has been sharing on
social media will be published soon.
See www.olivesenior.com Olive was interviewed for Your Local Arena’s Caribbean Journey.