In an attempt, to use the author\u27s own words, \u27to project my part of the world onto the map because I found when I went to live in England that people never knew where Trinidad was\u27, Samuel Selvon has created a literature of short stories and novels that portray the lives of essentially three kinds of character - country-bound peasants, middle-class Trinidadians living in Trinidad, and lower-class West Indian immigrants, lured to London by the grandiose expectations of an inverted El Dorado myth. Criticism has, to a large extent, neglected the middle - class Trinidadian who appears in An Island Is a World (1955) and I Hear Thunder (1963), the former considered by the author to be his most ambitious, and in some ways his most import...