Long before I read the novels of Sam Selvon or even met him, his reputation as a young promising writer had reached a group of us in Guyana during the early 1950\u27s. For this, we were grateful to Pansy Jeffrey and her late husband Jeff, who had returned to Guyana after living in London, England
I feel very privileged to have been asked to introduce to you all today Professor Lloyd Fernando. Ou...
A brief memoir of a friend and colleague from Flinders University, Australia who passed away in June...
A major phenomenon in the recent development of Caribbean literature has been the emergence of a fai...
The Winter 1960 issue of the Tamarack Review, devoted to West Indian writing, opened with Sam Selvon...
I cannot remember how old those Sundays were and if the sun had travelled already over the Observati...
I can\u27t remember when Sam started to contribute to Caribbean Voices, but it was just after the en...
When I come back here to Trinidad, I hear the kiskidee in the morning. You can identify yourself wit...
Although a sense of the need to migrate clearly affected early writers born in the Caribbean such as...
When I left Trinidad in 1950 I had been working as a journalist with the Tri11idad Guardian for five...
What I want to do today on the occasion of this celebration of the work of the late Sam Selvon quite...
With that loping stoop you bore down on me like an eagle (as I imagined one) and asked me to write s...
It was midnight on Friday 31, December 1999. Harman Dahl fell off his seat at the sound of all hell ...
The eponymous hero of Sam Selvon\u27s Moses Ascending (1975), an east Indian from Trinidad, buys a t...
I don\u27t think that I want to tell these events to the outside world more than once. In my head, o...
Henry George Lamond is no longer a household name, but he was once popular and widely known in Austr...
I feel very privileged to have been asked to introduce to you all today Professor Lloyd Fernando. Ou...
A brief memoir of a friend and colleague from Flinders University, Australia who passed away in June...
A major phenomenon in the recent development of Caribbean literature has been the emergence of a fai...
The Winter 1960 issue of the Tamarack Review, devoted to West Indian writing, opened with Sam Selvon...
I cannot remember how old those Sundays were and if the sun had travelled already over the Observati...
I can\u27t remember when Sam started to contribute to Caribbean Voices, but it was just after the en...
When I come back here to Trinidad, I hear the kiskidee in the morning. You can identify yourself wit...
Although a sense of the need to migrate clearly affected early writers born in the Caribbean such as...
When I left Trinidad in 1950 I had been working as a journalist with the Tri11idad Guardian for five...
What I want to do today on the occasion of this celebration of the work of the late Sam Selvon quite...
With that loping stoop you bore down on me like an eagle (as I imagined one) and asked me to write s...
It was midnight on Friday 31, December 1999. Harman Dahl fell off his seat at the sound of all hell ...
The eponymous hero of Sam Selvon\u27s Moses Ascending (1975), an east Indian from Trinidad, buys a t...
I don\u27t think that I want to tell these events to the outside world more than once. In my head, o...
Henry George Lamond is no longer a household name, but he was once popular and widely known in Austr...
I feel very privileged to have been asked to introduce to you all today Professor Lloyd Fernando. Ou...
A brief memoir of a friend and colleague from Flinders University, Australia who passed away in June...
A major phenomenon in the recent development of Caribbean literature has been the emergence of a fai...