Bocas Prize For Caribbean Literature
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Bocas Prize For Caribbean Literature
OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, inaugurated in 2011 by the NGC Bocas Lit Fest, is an annual literary award for books by Caribbean writers published in the previous year.The OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature
It is the only prize in the region that is open to works of different literary genres by writers of Caribbean birth or citizenship."OCM Bocas Prize enters sixth year"
''Daily Express'' (Trinidad), 6 September 2015. The prize award is US$10,000 and is sponsored by One Caribbean Media. The shortlisted nominees are awarded $3,000. Books may be entered in ...
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NGC Bocas Lit Fest
The NGC Bocas Lit Fest is the Trinidad and Tobago literary festival that takes place annually during the last weekend of April in Port of Spain. Inaugurated in 2011, it is the first major literary festival in the southern Caribbean and largest literary festival in the Anglophone Caribbean. A registered non-profit company, the festival has as its title sponsor the National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago (NGC). Other sponsors and partners include First Citizens Bank (Trinidad and Tobago), First Citizens Bank, One Caribbean Media (OCM), who sponsor the associated OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, CODE (sponsors of the Burt Award), and the Commonwealth Foundation. The NGC Bocas Lit Fest also works in collaboration with other international festivals and initiatives, and has hosted events showcasing Caribbean writing talent in New York, at the Brooklyn Book Fair, the Harlem Book Fair and elsewhere in the US. In 2012, Bocas partnered with the Edinburgh World Writers Conference ...
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Marlon James (novelist)
Marlon James (born 24 November 1970) is a Jamaican writer. He is the author of five novels: ''John Crow's Devil'' (2005), ''The Book of Night Women'' (2009), ''A Brief History of Seven Killings'' (2014), which won him the 2015 Man Booker Prize, '' Black Leopard, Red Wolf'' (2019), and ''Moon Witch, Spider King'' (2022). Now living in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in the U.S., James teaches literature at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is also a faculty lecturer at St. Francis College's Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing."Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing"
St. Francis College.


Early life and education

James was born in Kingston,

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Awards Established In 2011
An award, sometimes called a distinction, is something given to a recipient as a token of recognition of excellence in a certain field. When the token is a medal, ribbon or other item designed for wearing, it is known as a decoration. An award may be described by three aspects: 1) who is given 2) what 3) by whom, all varying according to purpose. The recipient is often to a single person, such as a student or athlete, or a representative of a group of people, be it an organisation, a sports team or a whole country. The award item may be a decoration, that is an insignia suitable for wearing, such as a medal, badge, or rosette (award). It can also be a token object such as certificate, diploma, championship belt, trophy, or plaque. The award may also be or be accompanied by a title of honor, as well as an object of direct value such as prize money or a scholarship. Furthermore, an honorable mention is an award given, typically in education, that does not confer the recipient(s ...
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Maisy Card
''Maisy'' is a British animated children's television series produced by King Rollo Films, PolyGram Visual Programming, and Universal Pictures Visual Programming. The show is based on the book series of the same name by Lucy Cousins. The series aired for one season of 26 episodes, with each episode being made up of four segments. ''Maisy'' first aired on CITV in the UK on 11 February 1999. The series finale aired on 2 November 2000. Plot The show focuses on the lives of Maisy Mouse and her friends. A mellow-voiced narrator narrates the action and communicates with the characters while the animals go through their paces without speaking, they instead make unusual weird sounds and noises which sound like speaking since they're meant to be four to nine years old. The narrator, however, can understand them easily because he is the only one who actually speaks. The animated series keeps the two-dimensional visual style of the books. Characters * Maisy is a four-year-old mouse ...
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Tessa McWatt
Tessa McWatt FRSL is a Guyanese-born Canadian writer. She has written seven novels and is a creative writing professor at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, United Kingdom. In 2021 she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Early life McWatt was born in Georgetown, Guyana, and moved to Canada with her family when she was three years old. She was raised in Toronto, where her family embraced the Canadian outdoors through camping, skiing, and canoeing. As a child, McWatt was interested in music, sports, and literature. Even as a child she knew she wanted to be a writer. Education McWatt studied English literature at Queen's University and then earned her MA at the University of Toronto. Her MA focused on post-colonial literature and explored subject matter like how outsiders are perceived within society and how there are conflicting ideas regarding belonging. Career After university, she found employment as an editor and college instructor ...
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Dionne Brand
Dionne Brand (born 7 January 1953) is a Canadian poet, novelist, essayist and documentarian. She was Toronto's third Poet Laureate from September 2009 to November 2012. She was admitted to the Order of Canada in 2017"Order of Canada honorees desire a better country"
'''', 30 June 2017.
and has won the for Poetry, the
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Madwoman (book)
''Madwoman'' is the fourth collection of poetry by Jamaican American poet Shara McCallum. Published in 2017 by Alice James Books, in ''Madwoman'' McCallum expands her work to the personal by exploring the difficulties of womanhood, madness, and motherhood. ''Madwoman''s 55 poems use both English and elements of Patwa, the Jamaican creole language she heard people speak (but never saw written) while she was growing up in Jamaica. ''Madwoman'' won the poetry category of the 2018 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature. Overview The poems in ''Madwoman'' discuss three different stages: childhood, adulthood, and motherhood, in relation to the study of identity and what it means to be a woman. She speaks about the relations between three different life stages and their intersection. The question of race matters as well in these poems for McCallum, a black woman with a white complexion. The speaker in the poems is the "madwoman", a character McCallum stated is based on a voice that s ...
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Shara McCallum
Shara McCallum is an American poet. She was awarded a 2011 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship for Poetry.National Endowment of the Arts 2011 Poetry Fellows
. Nea.gov. Retrieved 20 October 2011.
McCallum is the author of four collections of poems, including '''', which won the 2018 in the poetry category. She currently lives in



Angelo Bissessarsingh
Angelo Bissessarsingh (September 1982 – February 2, 2017) was an historian and author from Trinidad and Tobago. His written works include ''A Walk Back in Time: Snapshots of the History of Trinidad and Tobago''. He wrote a column entitled "Back in Time" for the ''Trinidad Guardian''. He was also the curator of the Virtual Museum of Trinidad and Tobago, a Facebook group that remains very active with nearly 44,000 members (as of mid-2022) and is currently managed by Patricia Bissessar, the historian's aunt. With the help of other history buffs and qualified historians, his legacy and passion have remained active through the “Angelo Bissessarsingh’s Virtual Museum of T&T.” Bissessarsingh was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2015 and initially given six months to live."Angelo Bissessarsingh has died"
...
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Safiya Sinclair
Safiya Sinclair (born 1984, Montego Bay, Jamaica) is a Jamaican poet and memoirist. Her debut poetry collection, ''Cannibal,'' won several awards, including a Whiting Award for poetry in 2016 and the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature for poetry in 2017. She is currently an associate professor of creative writing at Arizona State University. Early life and education Sinclair was born and raised in Montego Bay, Jamaica. She is the oldest of four children, with two sisters and one brother. She has described her father, a reggae musician, as a "militant Rasta man." It is because of what Sinclair refers to as the "alienating" experience of Rastafari culture that she turned to poetry. At 16, her first poem was published in the ''Jamaican Observer''. Sinclair moved to the United States in 2006 to attend college, first earning her BA from Bennington College in Vermont. She went on to obtain an MFA in Poetry from the University of Virginia, where she studied with Rita Dove, and a ...
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Augustown
''Augustown'' is a 2016 novel by Jamaican writer Kei Miller. ''Augustown'' was published in the UK by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in 2016 and by Pantheon Books in the US. It is Miller's third novel; he is also a poet. Plot The book is based on an historical incident from 1921 in which Baptist preacher Alexander Bedward told congregants he would physically fly up to heaven; instead he was committed to an insane asylum. In Miller's reimagining, however, the preacher proves able to fly and people gather in the impoverished neighborhood of Augustown to see the miracle for themselves. Reception Reviewing ''Augustown'' for ''The New Yorker'', Laura Miller contrasts the book to "the stereotype of a 'poet’s novel'—that is, it isn’t introspective, replete with long passages of description, and scant of plot. Instead, it is stuffed with the characters and stories of hardscrabble Augustown, a former hamlet on the outskirts of St. Andrew founded by slaves freed in 1838." In 2017, ''Au ...
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