Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press
========================================================================

April 1, 2003

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Please reply to:
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Peepal Tree Press -- Publishers of the Best in Worldwide Caribbean Writing

Below are short listings for Peepal Tree's titles by women authors.
If you would like more information on particular titles, just ask!

We can accept payment by cheque or international money order in UK
sterling, US dollars or Canadian dollars. The prices shown are in UK
sterling, please ask for current prices in other currencies.
Send enquiries /orders to hannah@peepaltreepress.com

Fiction

Campbell, Hazel, Singerman
August 1991, £5.99, 0-948833-44-0, 120 pages
These magical realist short stories deal with black identity, gender
relations and the connections between slavery and contemporary society.

Flanagan, Brenda, You Alone are Dancing
October 1990, £5.99,  0-948833-33-5, 201 pages
Even within the solidarity of a rural Afro-Caribbean village, a young
woman learns that she can rely only on herself.

Gilroy, Beryl, Gather the Faces
July 1996, £5.95, 0-948833-88-2, 120 pages
At 27, Marvella Payne has resigned herself to growing old and single
with her family, but her aunts have other ideas and find her a penfriend
from her native Guyana. A charming and witty love story.

Gilroy, Beryl, In Praise of Love and Children
July 1996, £6.95, 0-948833-89-0, 153 pages
Melda Hayley finds both comfort and pain in her Guyanese past when the
stresses of fostering the damaged children of the first generation of
black settlers in Britain become too great.

Gilroy, Beryl, Inkle and Yarico
July 1996, £6.95, 0-948833-98-X, 160 pages
Thomas Inkle, a shipwrecked 18th century adventurer, is rescued by
Yarico, a Carib woman who takes him as her husband. But when they are
both taken to Barbados his betrayal of her is total.

Gilroy, Beryl, Sunlight on Sweet Water
May 1994, £5.95, 0-948833-64-5, 139 pages
These charming stories depict a 1930s Afro-Guyanese village with its own
distinctive identity, where Africa remains a part of everyday life.

Gilroy, Beryl, Stedman and Joanna: A Love in Bondage
September 1998, £5.99, 1-900715-20-1, 216 pages (to be published)
A re-reading and re-visioning of John Stedman's 18th century account of
his marriage to Joanna, a slave in Surinam, this is a moving portrayal
of human relationships in their social and historical context.

Goulbourne, Jean, Excavation
July 1997, £5.99, 1-900715-11-2, 98 pages
When a party of students and their professor begin an archeological
excavation on the site of an old slave estate in Jamaica, the relics of
the past provoke confrontations no-one has bargained for.

Goulbourne, Jean, Womansong
September 1998, £5.99, 1-900715-03-1, 56 pages (to be published)
With both pungency and humour, these poems articulate the grievances,
hopes and unquenchable spirit of Black women in Jamaica and the
Caribbean.

Harris, Denise, Web of Secrets
May 1996, £6.95, 0-948833-87-4, pages
Through whispered conversations, fantasy and folklore, Denise Harris
explores divisions in a Guyanese family and the nation, and the healing
power of truth.

Henfrey, June, Coming Home and other stories
December 1994, £5.95, 0-948833-67-X, 118 pages
In settings ranging from slave times in Barbados to contemporary
Britain, these are strong and moving portrayals of women attempting to
definr themselves in situations where power is determined by race
and gender.

Jin, Meiling, Song of the Boatwoman
November 1996, £6.95, 0-948833-86-6, 144 pages
With lyrical imagination, painful realism and wicked humour these
stories explore the lives of Chinese women at points of crisis, change
and growth in China, London, Guyana, California and Malaysia.

maxwell, marina ama omowale, Chopstix in Mauby
October 1996, £6.95, 0-948833-96-3, 219 pages
A magical realist novel about 'the birth of woman time' and a woman's
journey through the Orisha chapelles and the 1970 uprising to self-
relisation and choice.

Persaud, Lakshmi, Butterfly in the Wind
1990, reprinted May 1996, £5.99, 0-948833-36-X, 208 pages
A sensitive account of the passage from childhood to to womanhood which
shows both the richness and limits of Trinidadian Indian society.

Persaud, Lakshmi, Sastra
December 1993, £6.99, 0-948833-71-8, 273 pages
Sastra focuses on the choices a young Hindu woman in Trinidad has to
make between her own desires and obedience to tradition.

Persaud, Lakshmi, FOR THE LOVE OF MY NAME
November 1999, £8.99/ US$15.30 / CAN$21.60, 1-900715-42-2 , 335 pages
Torn between confession and self-justification, President for Life,
Robert Augustus Devonish writes his memoirs as his country falls apart
around him; Kamilia prepares for a workers' last stand against his
regime; Vasu sets off to investigate the rumours of untold horrors in a
commune deep in the interior; and Marguerite Devonish has to decide
between loyalty to family or country in bringing to an end her brother's
crimes.
Through these and many other unforgettable characters Lakshmi Persaud
tells of the last days of the Caribbean island of Maya before it sinks
beneath the sea.
This challenging novel profoundly dramatises the consequences of ethnic
prejudices in a culture of masks which gives licence to individuals to
abandon moral responsibility for their actions. Its echoes resonate
across the killing fields of Bosnia, Kosova, East Timor - or wherever
state power gives free rein to the most primal impulses of kith and kin.
Told through multiple voices, whose tones range through the lyrical, the
direct and unvarnished, the conversational and the polished, For the
Love of My Name weaves a striking tapestry of hatreds and loves, duty
and the degradation of consciousness, despairs and hopes. Above all the
bright threads of human resilience glint in the weave.

Shewcharan, Narmala, Tomorrow is Another Day
March 1994, £6.95, 0-948833-47-5, 238 pages
Set in a decaying dictatorship, this novel explores the human costs of
social fragmentation and the wider social impact of individual choice.

Shinebourne, Jan, The Last English Plantation
October 1988, £5.99, 0-948833-13-0, 182 pages
As colonial rule comes to an end, the struggle for a new world order is
witnessed by an eleven year old girl involved in her own battles with
her mother.

Shinebourne, Jan, Timepiece
October 1986, £5.99, 0-948833-03-3, 186 pages
An important novel exploring the many levels of a young woman's fight
for independence and integrity in a male-dominated Guyanese world.

Poetry

Evaristo, Bernardine, Island of Abraham
November 1994, £5.95, 0-948833-60-2, 64 pages
Writing as a Black British woman, Bernardine Evaristo reaches out to
embrace a vision of the world not defined by Europe or patriarchy.

Manley, Rachel, A Light Left On
June 1993, £5.99, 0-948833-55-6, 56 pages
Although they deal with loss and grief, these poems evoke a rich
Caribbean natural world in which life is always present.

Pollard, Velma, Shame Trees Don't Grow Here
February 1993, £5.99, 0-948833-48-3, 72 pages
Shame Trees explores the necessity for moral values in the context of a
deeply politicised awareness of Caribbean history.


Books for children

Jagan, Janet, Anastasia the Anteater
January 1997, £4.50, 1-900715-09-0, 64 pages
An enterprising alligator, a freedom-loving waterdog and two brave girls
lost in the Guyanese bush are just a few of the characters whose
exploits children will eagerly devour.

Jagan, Janet, Patricia the Baby Manatee
December 1995, £4.50, 0-948833-92-0, 64 pages
These Guyanese tales of brave, mischevious and kindly animals and
children use humour and mystery to provide a strong framework of
positive human values which children will instinctively appreciate and
digest.

Jagan, Janet, When Grandpa Cheddi was a Boy - second issue,
December 1994, reprint March 1997, £4.50, 0-948833-75-0, 64 pages
This collection of stories will delight children all over the world and
give them a sense of the magical beauty of Guyana's landscape and the
humanity of its peoples.


Forthcoming titles

Forthcoming Poetry

Das, Mahadai, Bones - new edition,
May 1998, £5.99, 1-900715-21-X, 56 pages
Now in its second printing, writing from feminist and Indo-Caribbean
perspectives, Mahadai Das's poetry reveals a daring metaphorical
imagination.

Escoffery, Gloria, Mother Jackson Murders the Moon
March 1998, 1-900715-24-4, 60 pages Offer price: £5, usually £5.99
Whether celebrating domestic happiness or satirising contemporary
Jamaican life, whether speaking through a vividly drawn cast of
characters or in the persona of their creator, Miss G.E., Gloria
Escoffery writes with a visionary intensity all her own.

END
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0)113 2451703
fax 44 (0)113 2459616


Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing

return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press

return to Russ' Caribbean Literature



Below are short listings for Peepal Tree's literary, cultural and
historical titles. If you would like more information on particular titles,
just ask!

We can accept payment by cheque or international money order in UK
sterling, US dollars or Canadian dollars. The prices shown are in UK
sterling, please ask for current prices in other currencies.
Send enquiries /orders to hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk
Benjamin, Joel, They Came in Ships
August 1997, £12.95, 0-948833-94-7, 320 pages
The essays, stories and poetry of Indian Guyanese writers from 1890-1997
gathered here provide a fascinating insight into the transformation of
an ancient culture in the New World.

Bhana, Ed. Surendra, Essays on Indentured Indians in Natal
December 1991, £7.95, 0-948833-21-1, 235 pages
These essays break new ground in the study of Indian indentured labour,
the role of labour migration in economic development and the history of
Natal. The collection includes North-Coombes' pioneering comparison of
the role of indentured labour in the sugar industries of Natal and
Mauritius, Swan's study of worker accommodation and resistance, Beall's
investigation of the double oppression of women, and Surendra and
Arvinkumar Bhana's exploration of the very high rates of suicide amongst
indentured workers. Accounts of individual stories in several essays
ensure that the workers are never seen as faceless victims, and
Mesthrie's study of language contact and Brain's essay on religion give
further reminders that these migrants brought not only their labour but
their culture.
The editor, Surendra Bhana, formerly Professor of History at the
University of Durban-Westville, teaches at the University of Kansas,
U.S.A.

Grant (ed.), Kevin, The Art of David Dabydeen
May 1997, £12.99, 1-900715-10-4, 232 pages
In this volume, leading scholars from Europe, North America and the
Caribbean discuss David Dabydeen's poetry and fiction in the context of
the politics and culture of Britain and the Caribbean. Don't forget the
contents list in books blurbs

Mesthrie, Rajend, A Lexicon of South African Indian English
March 1992, £7.95, 0-948833-10-6, 148 pages
A scholarly but entertaining study of words, phrases and idioms which
reflects the diverse social and linguistic currents within which the
South African community has developed. It focuses on the effects
of language contact in borrowings, grammatical interference and semantic
shifts as speakers of Indic languages came into contact with speakers of
English, Afrikaans, Fanagalo and African languages.
This lexicon provides an invaluable source of comparison with Indian
English, the Creoles of the Caribbean, and with the linguistic
experience of other overseas South Asian communities.
Dr. Mesthrie teaches linguistics at the University of Cape Town.


Parekh, Bikhu, The Concept of Fundamentalism
April 1992, £4.99, 0-948833-56-4, 48 pages
Professor Parekh brings rigour and clarity to the discussion of the
concept of religious fundamentalism and cautions against the
unrestricted use of this concept to describe a wide range of
contemporary religious phenomena. He argues that lumping fundamentalism
together with religious conservatism, revivalism and ultra-orthdoxy
fails to distinguish its particular modern character.


Roopnaraine, Rupert, Web of October
October 1988, £4.99, 0-948833-18-1, 72 pages
This original and meditative text combines an intensive critical reading
of 'You Are involved', by Martin Carter, and a series of 'poems of
October' written within the spaces of the essay.

Seecharan, Clem, India and the Shaping of the Indo-Guyanese Imagination
December 1993, £5.95, 0-948833-61-0, 98 pages
A study of the impact of 19th century Indology and the rise of Indian
nationalism on the attitudes and cultural identity of the emerging Indo-
Guyanese elite in the early 20th century.
When the first East Indian intellectuals emerged in British Guiana at
the end of the nineteenth century, most of their compatriots were still
working as indentured or free labourers on the colony's sugar estates.
Indians were conscious that they were looked down on as barbarous
'coolies' by other sections of the population. In response, the
intellectual elite constructed a view of India, drawn from the writings
of Max Muller and Tagore, which provided the Indo-Guyanese community
with a sustaining sense of self-esteem. Clem Seecharan argues, though,
that whilst the vision of 'Mother India' stimulated the community's
cultural revival and hastened its entry into Guyanese political life, it
also constrained the ways in which it thought about its role in Guyana.


Shepherd, Verene, Transients to Settlers
April 1994, £12.95, 0-948833-32-7, 281 pages
In this valuable study of one of the smaller Indian communities in the
Caribbean, Dr. Shepherd explores the contrary tendencies towards
cultural absorption and cultural autonomy which can be seen in the
history of the group. The role of population size and density, the
availability of economic 'niches', the activity of missionaries and
educators and the attitudes of the wider society are examined as
contexts within which the Indo-Jamaican community worked out its
destiny. Chapters on indenture, patterns of rural and urban settlement,
education, economic activity and political participation provide
comparative standpoints for looking at variations within the total Indo-
Caribbean experience.
Verene Shepherd lectures at the University of the West Indies in
Jamaica. She is co-editor of Caribbean Slave Society and Economy: A
Student Reader.



Forthcoming Literary, Cultural and Historical Studies

Mahabir, Kumar, Indian in an Afro-Caribbean World
August 1998, £12.99, 0-948833-11-4, pages
Ranging widely over folk-culture, literature and contemporary mass
media, these essays explore the challenges of cultural self-definition
facing Indo-Caribbeans in the region.

END
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0)113 2451703
fax 44 (0)113 2459616

Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing

return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press

return to Russ' Caribbean Literature


========================================================================
. more of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press
From: Hannah Bannister hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk
Subject: Peepal Tree New Fiction Catalogue
Date: May 6, 1998 12:48 PM

Welcome to Peepal Tree Press' first ever e-mail catalogue. If nothing
has gone wrong, you are receiving this e-mail because you asked for
details of Peepal Tree's books. If we have made an error, please let us
know. This mailing contains full details of all Peepal Tree's 1998 and
1997 fiction. In a couple of days we'll be sending you the new Poetry
and Literary, Cultural and Historical studies. We won't be sending you
the backlist automatically as it is very long -- in the region of thirty
pages! If you would like a backlist e-mail, do ask. Otherwise you could
request a copy of the printed catalogue which will be available shortly,
if you would like one, please e-mail us with your postal address and
we'll get a copy to you as soon as we can.

To order:
We can accept payment by cheque or international money order in UK
sterling, US dollars or Canadian dollars. The prices shown are in UK
sterling, there is a 'currency converter' below. Postage per book is
65p for UK, $2.50 for USA and $3.50 for Canada.

Currency Conversion Table

UK £   US $    CAN $
3.99   $6.80   $9.60
4.50   $7.70   $10.80
4.99   $8.50   $12.00
5.95   $10.20  $15.00
5.99   $10.50  $15.00
6.95   $12.00  $17.00
6.99   $12.00  $17.00
7.95   $13.60  $19.20
7.99   $13.60  $19.20
8.99   $15.30  $21.60
9.99   $17.00  $24.00
12.95  $22.00  $34.00
12.99  $22.00  $34.00
14.99  $25.50  $36.00

Send your order by e-mail, and your payment by snail-mail to:

Peepal Tree Press, 17, King's Avenue, Leeds, LS6 1QS.
The moment we receive your payment, we'll send your books.

School and college orders will receive a 10% discount on list prices,
booksellers a 35% discount, though this may be increased depending on
quantities ordered. Books are supplied to Schools and Colleges with a
thirty day invoice. Bookseller credit terms are negotiable.

**************************************************** 
Send enquiries/orders to hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk
****************************************************
THE PEEPAL TREE CATALOGUE -- NEW FICTION

Settle into a comfy chair in your house, pass the time on a plane, in a
waiting room or relax on the beach with a good book and you enter its
world, and the outside world and its pressures are left behind. Through
this personal and individual act of opening a book and sharing its
vision, you support a huge infrastructure of writers, publishers,
libraries and bookshops. Without you, books are simply words on a page;
they need you to open them and give them life! Without you, publishers
like ourselves, dedicated to books which make a difference, could not
exist.

Need help choosing?
Use our knowledge! Contact Peepal Tree for suggestions, whether for your
new course reading list, for information on particular themes and issues
explored in our books, advice on what to choose for yourself as a
relaxing/exciting/mind-expanding read or as a  gift for your
mother/uncle/grandchild/love story reader/thriller-lover -- and well do
our best to help.

*** David Dabydeen
Disappearance
October 1998, £7.99  1-900715-30-9, 200 pages
New Caribbean edition
A nameless Guyanese engineer arrives in the village of Dunsmere to help
shore up a crumbling stretch of the Kent coast. He comes expecting to
find an England which is ordered and cultivated -- everything he dreams
of as a fitting place of escape from the 'brawling creole ways' of the
muddy coastland of Guyana. What he finds is a village of seething feuds
and a project undermined by corruption and grandiose delusions, part of
a society in an advanced state of post-imperial decay. Despairing of
ever belonging to this place, he is provoked into re-evaluating his
African Guyanese background in more positive ways, particularly by his
curious landlady, Mrs Rutherford, who abuses him as a 'Black man with an
English soul'.
Disappearance speaks both to England and the Caribbean in its searching
dissection of the colonial encounter and its continuing reverberations
in the psyche of both worlds.
On its first publication, Disappearance was praised as 'A mournful
comedy... a perky beauty softening its stark messages' (Sunday Times);
as 'Searching... in its clarity of style and vision' (The Scotsman) and
by the Times Literary Supplement as having 'Poise, compassion and
humour-- provocative and accomplished.'
David Dabydeen is the author of Slave Song, Coolie Odyssey and Turner
(poetry) and The Intended and The Counting House.

*** David Dabydeen
The Intended
October 1998, £7.99  1-900715-31-7, 200 pages
'But you must tek education... pass plenty exam and get good job.' It is
Auntie Clarice's advice that the young narrator remembers when, brought
from Guyana at the age of ten, he is abandoned by his father in a South
London slum. But this way forward brings deep problems of identity. In
Britain everyone who is not white is black. How does this equate to his
experiences as an Indo-Guyanese growing up in a society divided between
Africans and Indians?
How is he to come to terms with his divided heritage of language: the
order and clarity of the written English to which he aspires, but which
denies his selfhood, and the apparently unstructured Guyanese creole in
which his richest memories are inscribed?
 'Vivid, perceptive, funny and moving' --Penelope Lively
[it]'turns a thematic Heart of Darkness around to illumine a groping
pilgrimage -- Indian and Rastafarian -- issuing from distant colonies'
--Wilson Harris

*** Kwame Dawes
Bivouac
November 1998, £6.99 1-900715-19-8, 180 pages
When his father dies in suspicious circumstances, Ferron Morgan's trauma
is increased by the conflict within his family and his father's friends
over whether the death is the result of medical negligence or a
political assassination. Ferron has lived in awe of his father's radical
commitments but is forced to admit that, with the 1980's resurgence of
the political Right in the Caribbean, his father had lost faith, and was
already dead to everything that had meaning for him'.
Ferron's response to the death is further complicated by guilt,
particularly over his recent failure to protect his fiance, Dolores,
from a brutal rape. He begins, though, to investigate the direction of
his life with great intensity, in particular to confront his instinct to
keep moving on and running from trouble.
This is a sharply focused portrayal of contemporary Jamaica, in which
the private grief and trauma condenses a whole society's scarcely
understood sense of temporariness and dislocation. For both Ferron and
the society there has been the loss of the corpse of one's origins' and
the novel points to the need to find a way back before there can be a
movement forward.
This vision is reflected in the structure of the novel with its cycles
of flashback set in a non-linear, non-continuous narrative, and its
movement from conventional realism, with its emphasis on the givenness
of time, to the magical metaphors of the novel's dreaming in/conclusion.
Kwame Dawes was born in Ghana in 1962, and moved to Jamaica in 1971
where he remained until 1987. Now Professor of English at the University
of South Carolina at Columbia, he has published six collections of
poetry, Resisting the Anomie (Goose Lane Editions), Progeny of Air,
Prophets, Requiem, Jacko Jacobus, and Shook Foil, all published by
Peepal Tree. This is his first novel.

*** Beryl Gilroy
Stedman and Joanna: A Love in Bondage
September 1998, £5.99  1-900715-20-1, 216 pages
In 1764, John Stedman, a Scottish soldier, arrived in Surinam to assist
the Dutch who were putting down a slave rebellion with great brutality.
During his stay in Surinam, Stedman fell in love with and married
Joanna, a slave. All this is recorded in Stedman's own journal.
Beryl Gilroy's novel stays faithfully within the facts in the journal
but re-reads/rewrites the story in ways which bring new psychological
and historical insights to it. She brings her fictive imagination to
bear on the processes which led Stedman, a witness to the bestial
tortures inflicted by the Dutch on captured rebels, to make his leap
across the divide of race, not merely to bed Joanna, willingly or
unwillingly, but to marry her. Joanna's story is brought further into
the foreground and the novel explores aspects of the relationship about
which Stedman is silent.
Stedman and Joanna joins Beryl Gilroy's Inkle and Yarico as a moving
portrayal of the interplay between the psychological core of human
relationships and their social and historical context.

*** Syed Manzurul Islam
The Mapmakers of Spitalfields
January 1998, £5.99  1-900715-08-2, 144 pages.
These stories, set in London's Banglatown and Bangladesh, bring
startlingly fresh insights to the experiences of exile and settlement.
Written between realism and fantasy, acerbic humour and delicate grace,
they explore the lives of exiles and settlers, traders and holy men,
transvestite actors and the leather-jacketed, pool-playing youths who
defended Brick Lane from skinhead incursion.
In the title story, Islam makes dazzling use of the metaphor of map-
making as Brothero-Man, the 'invisible surveyor' galloping the veins of
your city' becomes the collective consciousness of all the settlers
inscribing their realities on the parts of Britain they are claiming as
their own.
Syed Manzural Islam was born in 1953 in what was still East Pakistan. He
is currently a lecturer in English studies. He is the author of The
Ethics of Travel: From Marco Polo to Kafka (MUP).

*** Lino Leito
The Gift of the Holy Cross
July 1998, £6.99  0-948833-15-7, 260 pages.
Leito's epic novel deals with the mingling of religion and politics as
the people of Goa wake from centuries of Portuguese rule only to find
their struggle inherited by the same classes who had aided and abetted
their colonial rulers. They find, too, that their distinctive culture is
in danger of being swallowed up by their incorporation into India.
Focusing on the tragic figure of Mario Jaques, a village leader isolated
by his own confusions and swept away by social forces beyond individual
control, Leito writes passionately of a popular movement betrayed. If
the old world is marked by injustice, ignorance and oppression, the poor
have at least a sense of community. In the new world there is only a
ruthless competitiveness in which the worst rise to the top.
Leito was born in Goa, resident in Uganda for some years and now lives
in Canada. He is the author of three collections of short stories.



New in 1997

*** Kevyn Alan Arthur
The View from Belmont
August 1997, £7.99  1-900715-02-3, 230 pages.
The View from Belmont tells two stories: one through the letters of a
young English widow who takes over her husband's cocoa estate in
Trinidad in 1823; the other through the responses of a group of
contemporary Trinidadians who are reading the letters at the time of the
1990 Muslimeen black power revolt.
Clara's letters present the insights of a perceptive, independent-minded
and generous-spirited young woman, who is nevertheless wholly committed
to the institution of slavery. The letters give a sharp sense of
Trinidadian society in the process of formation, but at their heart is
an account of Clara's relationships with those with whom she shares her
life on the estate, in particular Kano, a 'loyal' slave who she takes to
her bed.
For the contemporary Trinidadians, the letters raise troubling questions
about the nature of the national psyche, the absence of social consensus
and the extent to which the history of that period still shapes the
present. This is a comic, painful and moving novel. Its presentation of
the cruelties, violence and affections of everyday relations under
slavery raise questions not only about the nature of Caribbean
societies, but the nature of history and its interpretation.

*** Jean Goulbourne
Excavation
July 1997, £5.99  1-900715-11-2, 98 pages.
When a group of Jamaican students and their lecturers begin an
archaeological dig on the old estate of Plantation Plains, each has
different expectations. For Professor Milton, recently returned home
after years abroad, the dig is to be the crowning achievement of a
distinguished career. For Kwame, a lecturer from Ghana, it is the
opportunity to use his knowledge to help identify African survivals in
the New World. For rastafarian Akete, the dig is going to be part of his
mission to bring a sense of their African heritage to his fellow
sufferers in the ghetto, and for Carla the excavations on the site of
the Big House and the slave quarters are potent reminders that her own
ancestry is both black and white. For the two young Americans who join
them, the dig is the first chance to put their archaeological skills
into practice in an exotic new environment.
Each of the diverse group of people brought together by the dig is
changed by the experience, the result both of their encounters with the
relics of history, and the personal encounters within the group.
This is a dramatic and poetically written exploration of the interaction
of past and present, and of the issues of age, race and gender which the
excavation provokes. Jean Goulbourne is Jamaican.

*** Carl Jackson
Nor the Battle to the Strong
August 1997, £7.99  0-948833-97-1, 352 pages
From Imfe who is taken in slavery from Africa, Zero and Quamina who live
under slavery but never submit to being slaves, Bam and Jane who live to
see Emancipation but discover that they have been given little but the
freedom to starve, Tom and Louise who endure the injustices of the
colonial years, to Rocky who takes part in the popular uprisings for
freedom and democracy in the 1930s, Nor the Battle to the Strong is an
unrivalled portrayal of the lives of five generations of a family in
Barbados.
Nor the Battle to the Strong is a powerful and imaginative work of grief
and hope whose universality is pointed to in the title's reference to
Ecclesiastes: 'The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the
strong,'for time and chance happeneth to them all'
It takes the reader through horrors as elemental as those of the Greek
tragedy, through the dark humour of those who endured generations of
human injustice, and all that flood, drought, hurricane and disease
could inflict, to arrive at a hard-won but liberating vision of the
human capacity for freedom, love and forgiveness. Jackson sings a
redemption song which transports the reader out of darkness into light.
Carl Jackson was born in Barbados where he lives and works. He is the
author of East Wind in Paradise, a political thriller.

*** Geoffrey Philp
Uncle Obadiah and the Alien
February 1997, £5.99  1-900715-01-5, 160 pages
The lives of contemporary Jamaicans both at home and in exile in Miami
are portrayed with humour, pathos and deep understanding. Like the best
roots reggae albums, this collection mixes a multitude of voices and
attitudes with inventiveness and art. Righteous anger, ragamuffin
provocations and insightful observation are present through a variety of
forms: social realism, the Jamaican tall tale and even science fiction.
The social environments of contemporary Jamaica and Miami are sharply
drawn in these stories, but it is the inwardness and humanity of the
characterisation which makes them truly memorable.
'If Dickens were reincarnated as a Jamaican Rastaman, he would write
stories as hilarious and humane as these. Uncle Obadiah and the other
stories collected here announce Geoffrey Philp as a direct descendent of
Bob Marley: poet, philosophizer, spokesperson for our next new world.'
--Robert Antoni, author of Blessed is the Fruit and Divina Trace,
Winner of the 1992 Commonwealth Writers Prize

*** N.D. Williams
Prash and Ras
November 1997, £6.99  1-900715-00-7, 192 pages
Disparate worlds collide in Williams' two novellas. In 'My Planet of
Ras' a young German woman joins a Rastafarian commune in Jamaica. Under
the guidance of  Selassie, reader and healer with herbs, Ikael, artist-
painter, and Kilmanjaro, master drummer, and under the healing influence
of 'the herb  of nations' she learns to marvel, and to understand the
true nature of community ('You and I talking, one and one -- that is
community! Hardest thing to build these days. Not enough empty
reflecting silence, like mortar, to build with)'. Williams' portrayal of
the rootedness, the inner calm and visionary enlightment of the group is
movingly convincing, not least because the novella realistically conveys
the group's vulnerability, temptations and the costs of their denials.
In their rejection of materialism and competition, they indeed have to
live as if they are on another planet, constantly threatened by the
surrounding Babylon.
'What Happening There, Prash', is a contrary and equally convincing
portrayal of  the magnetic pull of North America and its offer of the
possibilities of individual recognition, competitive edge and material
success. Prash and his wife Sookmoon abandon the decaying 'socialist'
republic of Guyana for New York and for Sookmoon, at least, there is the
chance, eagerly seized, to remake her life as a liberated woman. But
when Prash gets mixed up in some serious drugs business, he discovers
that the freedom of the market has its price.


________________________________________________
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0) 113 2451703
fax 44 (0) 113 2459616

Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing
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Welcome to Part 2 of Peepal Tree Press' first ever e-mail catalogue. If
nothing has gone wrong, you are receiving this e-mail beacause you asked
for details of Peepal Tree's books. If we have made an error, please let
us know. This mailing contains full details of all Peepal Tree's 1998
and 1997 poetry. In a couple of days we'll be sending you the new
Literary, Cultural and Historical studies list. We won't be sending you
the backlist automatically as it is very long -- in the region of thirty
pages! If you would like a backlist e-mail, do ask. Otherwise you could
request a copy of the printed catalogue which will be available shortly.
If you would like one, please e-mail us with your postal address and
we'll get a copy to you as soon as we can. Please note that books are
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interested in a forthcoming title, let us know and we'll e-mail you when
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THE PEEPAL TREE CATALOGUE -- NEW POETRY

The breadth of Peepal Trees poetry list is unrivalled. In it you will
find significant shapers of the Caribbean poetry tradition such as E.M.
Roach whose collected poems represent the most important Caribbean
poetry before that of Walcott and Brathwaite; the work of established
poets such as Cyril Dabydeen, Howard Fergus, Kendel Hippolyte, Anthony
Kellman, Marc Matthews, Ian McDonald, Anthony McNeill and Ralph
Thompson; the important womens voices of Mahadai Das, Rachel Manley and
Velma Pollard, who are joined this year by Marcia Douglas (an
outstanding first collection), Gloria Escoffery, Jean Goulbourne and
Jennifer Rahim; this year sees also new work from Miami-based Jamaican
Geoffrey Philp and the highly respected academic and poet Stewart Brown.
Look out for the 1997 publication Shook Foil by Kwame Dawes, which along
with the new anthology of reggae poetry, Wheel and Come Again, and
Dawes' critical manifesto Natural Mysticism make a hugely significant
addition to Caribbean poetry.
But do discover what lies beyond anthologies! Without individual
collections they could not exist, and without readers and buyers neither
can these collections!

Need help choosing?
Use our knowledge! Contact Peepal Tree for suggestions, whether for your
new course reading list, for information on use of language, particular
themes and issues explored by the poets, advice on what to choose to
suit your mood -- to shake you up or calm you down, or as a gift for a
friend/your mother/uncle/grandparents -- and well do our best to help.


**edited by Kwame Dawes
Wheel and Come Again: An anthology of reggae poetry
April 1998, £8.99  1-900715-13-9, 216 pages
This is an anthology to delight both lovers of reggae and lovers of
poetry which sings light as a feather, heavy as lead over the bedrock of
drum and bass. If in the past Caribbean poetry seemed split between the
English literary tradition and the oral performance of dub poetry, Wheel
and Come Again brings together work which combines reggae's emotional
immediacy, prophetic vision, fire and brimstone protest and sensuous
eroticism with all the traditional resources of poetry: verbal
inventiveness, richness of metaphor and craft in the handling of
patterns of rhythm, sound and poetic structure.
Its range is as wide as reggae itself. There are poems celebrating, and
sometimes mourning, the lives and art of such creative geniuses as Don
Drummond, Count Ossie, Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Bob Marley, Big Youth, Bunny
Wailer, Winston Rodney, Patra and Garnett Silk. There are poems of
apocalyptic vision, fantasy, humour and storytelling; poems about
history, culture, politics, religion, art, human relationships and love;
poems which employ standard Caribbean English, poems written in Jamaican
nation language and many poems which move easily between the two.
From its birth in the ghettos of Kingston, reggae has become an
international musical language, and whilst Jamaicans are inevitably well
represented in this anthology, Wheel and Come Again reflects reggae's
universal appeal with contributors from the USA, Canada, Britain, Guyana
and St. Lucia. What all have found in reggae is an art with a rich
aesthetic which, like the poetry they aspire to write, speaks to the
body, mind and spirit, which compels a state of heightened expectancy
with its combination of pattern and surprise:
'Counting out the unspoken pulse
then wheel and come again'

** Marcia Douglas
Electricity Comes to Cocoa Bottom
November 1998, £6.99  1-900715-28-7, 80 pages
The reader is taken on a journey of light, from the rural flicker of the
firefly, the half-moonlight of the limbo of exile, to the sense of
connectedness and arrival suggested by the image of the eight-pointed
star. It is also a journey towards voice, beginning with an image of the
voicelessness of the country people who witness the coming of lights to
Cocoa Bottom, but have no-one amongst them to record the event. It
explores the moment of leaving Jamaica when 'there is something I must
say before I go', but which is never said, and the loss of language
threatened in the image of the American Accent Programme tape cassettes
offered for sale on the flight to the USA. The collection ends with two
contrary images of the possession of language. There is the 'Voice
Lesson From the Unleashed Woman's Unabridged Dictionary' which urges:
'follow the instinct of your tongue/ and say it your way' and the final
poem which describes her father's baptism and birth into the gift of
tongues when social language cannot express his glimpse of
transcendence.
Each poem has its own poignant individuality, but there is also a
powerful sense of architecture which runs through the collection.
Marcia Douglas was born in England and grew up in Jamaica. She currently
has a fellowship at the State University of New York.

** Gloria Escoffery
Mother Jackson Murders the Moon
March 1998, £5.99  1-900715-24-4, 60 pages
A vivid cast of characters throng these poems. There is Mother Jackson,
the ole hige who lays out her thoughts like a mortician, who is both
creator and destroyer. There are the players of the Rootsman Theatre of
the Absurd, such as fallen politician Julian Lapith, who knows too well
the power of incantation; Dub Deacon Lapith with his Sankey soul; poor
Bedward Lapith with his millenarian dreams of flight; Busha Godhead self
swoopsing down to intervene in human affairs and -- the heroine of the
cast -- Aliveyah, to whom nature speaks direct by the nudge of a beak.
And there is, of course, their creator, Miss G.E., who shares with us
the 'rockstone passion of a Jamaican country bumpkin born and nurtured
in Arcadia'. Whether in her celebrations of domestic happiness in a
house where even the chairs talk, or in her satires on Jamaican life,
Gloria Escoffery writes with a visionary intensity and fantastical
imagination which is all her own. And though she feels it is no joke to
be three people -- old woman, young girl and child -- who don't quite
understand one another, Miss G.E. cannot but write her love letter to
the world.
Gloria Escoffery was born in 1923. She has worked as a teacher, written
extensively on Jamaican art and is one of her country's finest painters.

** Howard Fergus
Lara Rains & Colonial Rites
March 1998, £6.95  0-948833-95-5, 88 pages
Howard Fergus' poems explore the nature of living on Montserrat, a 'two-
be-three island/hard like rock', vulnerable to the forces of nature
(Hurricane Hugo and the erupting Soufriere) and still 'this British
corridor'. He writes honestly and observantly about these contingencies,
finding in them metaphors for experiences which are universal. Nature's
force strips life to its bare essentials ('Soufriere opened a new
bible/in her pulpit in the hills/ to teach us the arithmetic of days')
and reveals creation and destruction as one. ('We celebrate Hugo child
of God/ he killed and made alive for a season'). In a small island
society individual lives take on an enhanced significance: they are its
one true resource and the sequence of obituary poems bring home with
especial force how irreplaceable they are.
Beyond Montserrat, Fergus looks for a wider Caribbean unity, but finds
it only in cricket (and crime). Cricket, indeed, provides a major focus
for his sense of the ironies of Caribbean history: that through a white-
flannelled colonial rite with its roots in an imperial sense of
Englishness, the West Indies has found its only true political framework
and the means, explored in the sequence of poems celebrating Brian
Lara's feats of 1994, to overturn symbolically the centuries of
enslavement and colonialism.
As Stewart Brown writes in the Longman Caribbean New Voices 1, Fergus is
a poet of real stature.
Howard Fergus was born in Montserrat. He studied at the University
College of the West Indies and the Universities of Bristol and
Manchester. He has been Chief Education Officer and Speaker of the
Legislative Council of Montserrat. He is currently resident tutor at the
Extra-Mural Department of the UWI based there. He has written
extensively on Montserrat and is the author of three previous
collections of poetry: Cotton Rhymes (1976) Green Innocence (1978) and
Stop the Carnival (1980)

** Jean Goulbourne
Womansong
September 1998, £5.99, 1-900715-03-1, 64 pages
In Womansong, Jean Goulbourne articulates the grief, hopes and
unquenchable spirit of black women in the Caribbean. She writes with the
directness of the reggae lyric, with both pungency and humour, and with
an aphoristic economy which has the art of saying more with less.
Her poems encompass the lives of women old and young; middle-class and
sufferers; women whose lives are enclosed, who want liberation from the
'station of motherhood, wifehood and frustration', and women who through
their resistance, creativity and assertion of selfhood have made space
for themselves. The celebration of such lives stands as a beacon of hope
in the depiction of Jamaican society in which rape, poverty and
abandonment are too frequently women's lot.

** Anthony McNeill
Chinese Lanterns from the Blue Child
March 1998, £5.99  1-900715-18-X, 64 pages

Somebody is hanging:
a logwood tree
laden with blossoms
in a deep wood.
The body stirs left
in the wind;
If the wind could send
its miracle breath
back to that person,
I tell you it would.
Love is Earth's mission
despite the massed dead.
On the night of the hanging
the Autumn moon bled.

Anthony McNeill was without doubt amongst the finest contemporary
Caribbean poets, whose previous collections, Reel from 'The Life Movie'
and Credences at the Altar of Cloud, were hailed as works of immense
originality. Chinese Lanterns from the Blue Child won the 1995 Jamaican
National Literary Award. Completed shortly before his death, it is a
farewell to the world which moves like a bird in flight between moments
of painful regret, wry humour and a sense of closure.
Anthony McNeill's word-lanterns will continue to flame in the darkness
long beyond his death. He was born in Jamaica in 1941. He died in 1996.

** Sasenarine Persaud
The Wintering Kundalini
October 1998, £5.99 0-948833-79-3, 72 pages
Persaud enriches Caribbean poetry by bringing to it new dimensions of
imagery and philosophical tradition from his Indian ancestry. The
imagery of cobra, serpent and Kundalini from Tantric Yoga mesh with a
political and personal engagement with both Guyana and more recently
Canada. This is a meeting of a thoroughly modern sensibility with the
riches of an ancient tradition. Persaud is a poet who, in the words of
Howard Fergus in The Caribbean Writer, has to be taken seriously as an
'architect of the subconscious'.
Sasenarine Persaud is also the author of the collection Demerary
Telepathy, and two novels. The Ghost of Bellow's Man, and Dear Death,
both published by Peepal Tree.

** Geoffrey Philp
Hurricane Center
February 1998, £6.99  1-900715-23-6, 67 pages
El nino stirs clouds over the Pacific. Flashing tv screens urge a calm
that no one believes. The police beat a slouched body, crumpled like a
fist of kleenex. The news racks are crowded with stories of pestilence,
war and rumours of war. The children, once sepia-faced cherubim, mutate
to monsters that eat, eat, eat. You notice a change in your body's
conversation with itself, and in the garden the fire ants burrow into
the flesh of the fruit.
Geoffrey Philps's poems stare into the dark heart of a world where
hurricanes, both meteorological and metaphorical, threaten you to the
last cell. But the sense of dread also reveals what is most precious in
life, for the dark and accidental are put in the larger context of
season and human renewal, and Hurricane Center returns always to the
possibilities of redemption and joy.
In the voices of Jamaican prophets, Cuban exiles, exotic dancers,
drunks, race-track punters, canecutters, rastamen, middle-class
householders and screw-face ghetto sufferers, Geoffrey Philp writes
poetry which is both intimately human and cosmic in scale. On the
airwaves between Miami and Kingston, the rhythms of reggae and mambo
dance through these poems.
Geoffrey Philp was born in Jamaica. He now lives and works in Miami. His
publications include a poetry collection, Florida Bound and a collection
of short stories, Uncle Obadiah and the Alien.

** Jennifer Rahim
Between the Fence and the Forest
November 1998, £6.99  1-900715-27-9, 88 pages
Comparing herself to a douen, a mythical being from the Trinidadian
forests whose head and feet face in different directions, Jennifer
Rahim's poems explore states of uncertainty both as sources of
discomfort and of creative possibility. The poems explore a Trinidad
finely balanced between the forces of rapid urbanisation and the
constantly encroaching green chaos of tropical bush, whose people, as
the descendants of slaves and indentured labourers, are acutely
resistant to any threat to clip their wings and fence them in, whose
turbulence regularly threatens a fragile social order. In her own life,
Rahim explores the contrary urges to a neat security and to an
unfettered sense of freedom and her attraction to the forest 'where
tallness is not the neighbour's fences/ and bigness is not the swollen
houses/ that swallow us all'. It is, though, a place where the
bushplanter 'seeing me grow branches/ draws out his cutting steel and
slashes my feet/ since girls can never become trees'
Jennifer Rahim was born and grew up in Trinidad. Her first collection of
poems, Mothers Are Not the Only Linguists was published in 1992. She
also writes short fiction and criticism. She currently lectures in
English at the University of West Indies in Jamaica.

** Ralph Thompson
Moving On
February 1998, £6.99  1-900715-17-1, 104 pages
The poems in Moving On recreate moments of change, loss and epiphany.
There are vivid glimpses of a prewar Jamaican childhood -- of sexual
discovery under a billiard table and of the rude ingratitude of a goat
saved from dissection in the school biology lab. The long sequence,
'Goodbye Aristotle, So Long America', explores the years of study at a
Jesuit university in America and the making both of a lifetime's values
and of the sense of irony which has made it possible to live with them.
Other poems reflect on the experience of ageing, of increasing
vulnerability, but also of an increased appreciation for what sustains
human relationships through time.
Jamaica is present in these poems as a place of aching natural beauty,
but whose violent human energies can only be viewed with an ambivalent
love and fear, where:

In the city's bursting funeral parlours
the corpses glow at night, nimbus of blue
acetylene burning the darkness under the roof,
lighting the windows... crunch of bone and sinew
as a foot curls into a cloven hoof.

Louis Simpson described Ralph Thompson's first collection, The Denting
of a Wave, as 'First rate poetry... intelligent and gifted with a sense
of humour' and other reviewers praised his warmth, exact observation,
craft and vivid storytelling.
Ralph Thompson is a Jamaican who, as well as being a painter and a poet,
is the Senior Executive of one of his country's biggest companies.

New in 1997

** Cyril Dabydeen
Discussing Columbus
February 1997, £6.95  0-948833-57-2, 96 pages
For Cyril Dabydeen, the historical figure of Columbus is an
'illustration of an odd and idiosyncratic destiny at work'. In this
collection of poems, Dabydeen explores the personal confluences and
ironies of a history which brought his ancestors as labourers from India
to the Caribbean in an ironic inversion of Columbus' original mistake.
On 'a deserted but peopled land', Dabydeen explores experiences of
Canada and the Caribbean which simultaneously speak of a past of brutal
genocide and tyranny and a world of recreating newness, constantly
awaiting rediscovery, constantly evolving from the heterogeneous
convergencies which that voyage of 1492 began.

** Kwame Dawes
Shook Foil: a collection of reggae poetry
December 1997, £6.99  1-900715-14-7, 76 pages
When the guitars tickle a bedrock of drum and bass, when the girl a
shock out and a steady hand curve round her sweat-smooth waist, when the
smell of Charlie mingles with the chemicals of her hair and the groove
is of the sweetest friction -- how is a young man to keep his way pure?
Kwame Dawes' poetry rises to new heights in these psalms of confession
and celebrations of reggae's power to prophesy, to seek after
righteousness and seduce the body and mind. Here is poetry walking the
bassline, which darts sweetly around the rigid lick of the rhythm guitar
yet expresses all the sadness and alienation at the heart of reggae.
This, for Dawes, is the earth which 'never tells me my true home' and
where behind every chekeh of the guitar there is the ancestral memory of
the whip's crack.
Shook Foil dramatises the conflict between the purity of essences and
the taints of the actual, not least in the poems which focus on Bob
Marley's life. Here is the rhygin, word-weaving prophet and the
philanderer with the desperate hunger for yard pumpum, the revealer of
truths and the buffalo soldier who has married yard with show biz
affluence.
Above all there is the intense sadness of Marley's death, for how can
one live without the duppy conqueror's defiant wail in an island gone
dark for the passing of his song?
But for Shook Foil there is always the gospeller's hope that the dead
will rise from dub ruins and patch a new quilt of sound for the feet to
prance on. And when the high hat shimmering and the bass drum thumping,
what else to do but dance?

** Kendel Hippolyte
Birthright
February 1997, £6.99  0-948833-93-9, 124 pages
The Heinemann Book of Caribbean Poetry described Kendel Hippolyte as
'perhaps the outstanding Caribbean poet of his generation'. Until now
his poetry has only been available in anthologies and slim collections
which have been little seen outside St. Lucia.
Birthright reveals him as a poet who combines acute intelligence and
passion, a barbed wit and lyrical tenderness.
He writes with satirical anger from the perspective of an island
marginalised by the international money markets in a prophetic voice
whose ancestry is Blake, Whitman and Lawrence, married to the
contemporary influences of reggae, rastafarian word-play and a dread
cosmology.
He writes, too, with an acute control of formal structures, of sound,
rhythm and rhyme -- there are sonnets and even a villanelle -- but like
'Bunny Wailer flailing Apollyon with a single song', his poetry has 'a
deepdown spiritual chanting rising upfull-I'.
Whilst acknowledging a debt of influence and admiration to his fellow
St. Lucian, Derek Walcott, Kendel Hippolyte's poetry has a direct force
which is in the best sense a corrective to Walcott's tendency to
romanticise the St Lucian landscape and people.
Kendel Hippolyte was born in St. Lucia in 1952 and has lived there all
his life. He is a dramatist and co-founder of the Lighthouse Theatre
Company, one of the Caribbean's most important theatre groups. Three of
his collections of poetry were published in St Lucia and his work has
been anthologised in The Penguin Book of Caribbean Verse, West Indian
Poetry, Voiceprint, Crossing Water, Caribbean Poetry Now and the
Heinemann Book of Caribbean Poetry.
_____________________________________________________________________
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0) 113 2451703
fax 44 (0) 113 2459616

Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing
return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press

return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Literature

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Hi from all at Peepal Tree,

Here's a 'Stop Press', we have another new poetry collection scheduled
for 1998:

** Stewart Brown
Elsewhere
August 1999, £7.99/ US$13.60/ CAN$19.20
ISBN: 1-900715-32-5, 128 pages

Stewart Brown has been described as 'one of the most exciting and
original poets currently writing.'
Praised by Fred D'Aguiar for the 'peculiar chameleon-like power' of his
imagination, his 'capacity to belong anywhere and to any experience
without being compromised', Stewart Brown's poems encompass  Africa, the
Caribbean, Wales and England; to the sweep of imperial history and its
painful aftermath and to the intimacies of domestic life. He writes of
Africa and the Caribbean with a rare combination of sympathy, honesty
and inwardness, while never pretending to be other than an Englishman
abroad. He writes affectionately but without sentiment of 'ordinary'
English life from the perspective of one who has been elsewhere, in ways
which allow us to see it afresh.
But if these poems have a passionate concern with love, politics,
history and the natural world, they are no less concerned with the
shaping power of art, both as a subject and in the poems' own formation.
Elsewhere brings together, frequently in revised form, poems from
Brown's earlier much praised collections, Mekin Foolishness, Zinder and
Lugard's Bridge, and many new poems. 'Elmina', an extended and moving
meditation on an Englishman's sense of complicity in the history of the
slave trade, will undoubtedly further enhance his reputation.
After spells teaching in Jamaica, Nigeria, and Barbados Stewart Brown
has lectured at the Centre for West African Studies at the University of
Birmingham for the past ten years. He has edited several anthologies of
Caribbean writing and published many books and essays on aspects of West
Indian culture.


Best wishes
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0) 113 2451703
fax 44 (0) 113 2459616

Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing
return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press

return to the top of Russ' Caribbean Literature

========================================================================

. more of Russ' Caribbean Book Titles from Peepal Tree Press

Welcome to Part 3 of Peepal Tree Press' first ever e-mail catalogue of
new Literary, Cultural and Historical Studies. 
**************************************************** 
Send enquiries/orders to hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk
****************************************************
THE PEEPAL TREE CATALOGUE
-- NEW LITERARY, CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL STUDIES


**eds. Joel Benjamin, Laxmi Kallicharan, Ian McDonald and Lloyd Searwar
They Came in Ships - an anthology of Indo-Guyanese Writing
February 1998, £12.95  0-948833-94-7, 320 pages
From 1838 until 1917, Indians arrived to work as indentured labourers in
Guyana. The majority never returned to India and today over 50% of the
Guyanese population is of Indian origin. This anthology of prose and
poetry shows how the Indians changed the character of Guyana and the
Caribbean and how, over 150 years of settlement, Indians became Indo-
Guyanese.
Ranging from the earliest attempts at cultural self-definition in the
19th century, to the creative writing of the 1990s, this anthology
provides a fascinating insight into the transformation of an ancient
culture in the New World.
Brief introductory essays set historical contexts, and there is an
invaluable bibliography of Indo-Guyanese writing. This is the only
anthology of its kind.

Contents:

Section 1: Early narrative images of the Indian presence in non-Indian
           writing
Section 2: The growth of self-awareness: the first definitions of an
           Indo-Guyanese identity from within the community (1890-1970)
Section 3: The beginnings of Guyanisation: Essays on Indo-Guyanese
           cultural forms
Section 4: An anthology of Indo-Guyanese prose: includes the writing of
           Cyril Dabydeen, Haris Khemraj, Peter Kempadoo, Rooplall Monar,
           Sasenarine Persaud, Sheik Sadeek, Jan Shinebourne and Narmala
           Shewcharan.
Section 5: An anthology of Indo-Guyanese poetry: includes the work of
           J.W. Chinapen, Cyril Dabydeen, David Dabydeen, Mahadai Das,
           Arnold Itwaru, Rayman Mandal, Rooplall Monar,
           Sasenarine Persaud, Rajkumarie Singh, Kenneth Taharally,
           Shana Yardan and fifteen others.
Section 6: Bibliography of Indo-Guyanese Imaginative Writing 1890-1995

** Dale Bisnauth
The Settlement of Indians in Guyana 1890-1930
June 1998, £14.99 / US$25.50 / CAN$36 ISBN 1-900715-16-3, 260 pages
As Guyana struggles to overcome its legacy of ethnic hostility between
Indo and Afro-Guyanese, this is a timely and unbiased study of the
historical processes which led in part to these divisions.
It focuses on the crucial period when Indian indentured labourers became
a permanent part of Guyanese society. It explores both the inner
processes of Indian settlement and the beginnings of that community's
political involvement with the wider society and relationships with the
Afro-Guyanese.
It charts how, in the process, Indian peasants were transformed into
industrialised wage labourers on the sugar estates, rice farmers and
urban professionals, and a distinctive Indo-Guyanese culture emerged. It
looks frankly at the ethnic considerations which shaped relationships
between the two groups.
In looking critically at the divide and rule policies of successive
colonial governments, and situating both Africans and Indians in a
common history of exploitation, Dale Bisnauth's study offers a clear and
insightful basis for contemporary understanding. A valuable
contribution to South Asian Diaspora studies, this book presents a
scholarly treatment of the role of ethnicity in a plural society and a
cogent discussion of the processes of settlement and cultural change.
Dr Bisnauth was secretary of the Caribbean Council of Churches and is
currently Minister of Education in the Government of Guyana.

** Kamau Brathwaite
The Love Axe:/l
December 1998, £12.99  0-948833-80-7, 240 pages
At once a manifesto for a revolutionary Caribbean aesthetics, a work of
detailed literary analysis and a scholarly documentation of a vital
period in Caribbean history, Love Axe/I is unique and indispensable. As
a work of literary and cultural history it deals not only with
significant texts, but with the wider artistic, popular and intellectual
movements which were part of the profound revolution in West Indian
post-colonial consciousness which is the book's subject. In addition to
major discussions of the work of Paule Marshall, Roger Mais, Derek
Walcott, George Lamming and Jean Rhys, there is, most valuably,
extensive coverage of the flowering of innovative writing published
during the later 1960s-1970s, but so much of which is out of print.
The Love Axe:/l was announced some time ago, but it has been delayed as
the author is compiling updated appendices which will be an
indispensible addition to this ground-breaking critical study. We
promise that The Love Axe:/l will be well worth the wait!
Kamau Brathwaite, as poet, historian and literary critic, is everywhere
recognised as one of the Caribbean's most distinguished authors.


**ed. Dr. Stewart Brown
All Are Involved: The Art of Martin Carter
April 2000, £14.99 / US$25.50 / CAN$36  1-900715-26-0, 413 pages
Postage Rates per copy STG£1.20 2nd class STG£4.77 airmail US$7.80 air
CAN$12 airmail -- sorry if these seem a bit steep, the book is a
satisfying 413 pages, and consequently rather heavy.
This critical anthology offers a long overdue evaluation
of the work of this major Caribbean poet and critic.
The Guyanese poet Martin Carter, 1927 - 1997, was
without question one of the major poets of the English
language in our time. In the Caribbean, Carter has long
been regarded as one of the great poets who chronicled
the journey from colonialism to independence, alongside
such figures as Aimé Césaire, Derek Walcott, Nicholas
Guillen and Kamau Brathwaite. While his earlier poems
have become classics of socialist literature, translated
into many languages, and are among the foundation stones
of Caribbean poetry, they have hardly been acknowledged
in more general accounts of poetry in English. It was
too easy for lazy critics and anthologists to dismiss
him as ‘merely’ a political poet, one who swore, as he
put it one poem, to use his shirt as 'a banner for the
revolution.'
In fact, looking at Carter’s work overall it is hard to
think of a contemporary poet writing in English who
showed more concern for craft, who measured his
utterance with greater care. His later work, while it
never lost its political edge, was more oblique and
cerebral than the overtly political poems of his youth.
It sits most comfortably alongside that of fellow South
American poets Valejo, Neruda and Paz. They are his
contemporaries in every sense; his work is of that
originality, stature and elemental force.
This book sets out to celebrate Martin Carter’s life and
work and to establish a context for reading his poetry.
Essays deal with the historical, political and literary
contexts of his writing, provide detailed readings of
his poetry and critical writings, and offer discussions
by younger Caribbean poets of his influence on their
work.
There are biographical essays by Carter's contemporaries, interviews
with Carter and a detailed bibliography. Contributors include John
Agard, Kamau Brathwaite, Stewart Brown, David Dabydeen, Fred D'Aguiar,
Kwame Dawes, Michael Gilkes, Wilson Harris, Roy Heath, Kendel Hippolyte,
Louis James, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Eusi Kwayana, George Lamming, Ian
McDonald, Mark McWatt, Mervyn Morris, Grace Nichols, Gordon Rohlehr,
Andew Salkey and many others.

** Daryl Cumber Dance
New World Adams - second edition
October 1998, £12.99 (new edition) 1-900715-04-X, 340 pages
In these interviews, held in the early 1980s, with twenty-two of the
major writers of the English-speaking Caribbean, Daryl Dance brings
together what is much more than just a valuable source book for readers
of West Indian writing. The interviews are highly readable --by turns
probing, combative and reflective and always absorbing. Daryl Dance
brings to the interviews a rare breadth of knowledge and empathy with
the work of the writers interviewed and the openly avowed insights of an
African-American woman.
The writers interviewed include Michael Anthony, Louise Bennett, Jan
Carew, Martin Carter and Denis Williams, Austin Clarke, Wilson Harris,
John Hearne, C. L. R. James, Ismith Khan, George Lamming, Earl Lovelace,
Tony McNeil, Pam Mordecai and Velma Pollard, Mervyn Morris, Orlando
Patterson, Vic Reid, Dennis Scott, Sam Selvon, Michael Thelwell, Derek
Walcott and Sylvia Wynter.
Daryl Dance is Professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University,
Richmond.

** Kwame Dawes
Natural Mysticism
April 1998, £12.99  1-900715-22-8, 216 pages
Kwame Dawes speaks for all those for whom reggae is a major part of
life. He describes how reggae has been central to his sense of selfhood,
his consciousness of place and society in Jamaica, his development as a
writer - and why the singer Ken Boothe should be inseparably connected
to his discovery of the erotic.
Natural Mysticism is also a work of acute cultural analysis. Dawes
argues that in the rise of roots reggae in the 1970s, Jamaica produced a
form which was both wholly of the region and universal in its concerns.
He contrasts this with the mainstream of Caribbean literature which,
whilst anticolonial in sentiment was frequently conservative and
colonial in form. Dawes finds in reggae's international appeal more than
just an encouraging example. In the work of artists such as Don
Drummond, Bob Marley, Winston Rodney and Lee 'Scratch' Perry, he finds a
complex aesthetic whose inner structure points in a genuinely
contemporary and postcolonial direction. He identifies this aesthetic as
being both original and eclectic, as feeling free to borrow, but
transforming what it takes in a subversive way. He sees it as embracing
both the traditional and the postmodern, the former in the complex
subordination of the lyric, melodic and rhythmic elements to the
collective whole, and the latter in the dubmaster's deconstructive play
with presences and absences. Above all, he shows that it is an aesthetic
which unites body, emotions and intellect and brings into a single focus
the political, the spiritual and the erotic.
In constructing this reggae aesthetic, Kwame Dawes both creates a
rationale for the development of his own writing and brings a new and
original critical method to the discussion of the work of other
contemporary Caribbean authors.
Natural Mysticism has the rare merit of combining rigorous theoretical
argument with a personal narrative which is often wickedly funny. Here
is a paradigm shifting work of Caribbean cultural & literary criticism
with the added bonus of conveying an infectious enthusiasm for reggae
which will drive readers back to their own collections or even to go out
and extend them!

** Mirza Sheikh I'tesamuddin
The Wonders of Vilayet - translated by Kaiser Haq
November 1998, £9.99  1-900715-15-5, 160 pages
In 1765, Mirza Sheikh I'tesamuddin, a Bengali munchi employed by the
East India Company, travelled on a mission to Britain to seek protection
for the Mogul Emperor Shah Alam II. The mission was aborted by the greed
and duplicity of Robert Clive, but it resulted in this remarkable
account of the Mirza's travels in Britain and Europe. Written in
Persian, 'Shigurf Nama-e-Vilayet' or 'Wonderful Tales about Europe' is
an entertaining, unique and culturally valuable document. The Mirza was
in no sense a colonial subject, and whilst he wrote frankly about what
he felt accounted for India's decline and Europe's contemporary
ascendance, he was a highly educated, culturally self-confident observer
with a sharp and quizzical curiosity about the alien cultures he
encountered. His accounts of visits to the theatre, the circus,
freakshows, the 'mardrassah of Oxford', Scotland, of the racial alarms
his presence sometimes provoked and of his impressions of British moral
codes (including the 'filthy habits of the firinghees') make for
fascinating reading.
Kaiser Haq's scholarly, modern translation is the first to appear in
English since the original 'abridged and flawed translation' which
appeared in 1827. The Wonders of Vilayet is an important document, a
salutary addition to Western accounts of the 'Otherness' of India,
orientalism in reverse.

** Marc Wadsworth
Comrade Sak
September 1998, £9.99  0-948833-77-7, 180 pages
There has been a recent revival of interest in the life of Shapurji
Saklatvala, the Black Communist MP who won the seat of Battersea North
in 1922. Comrade Sak charts Saklatvala's movement from privileged Parsi
beginnings in the Tata family to revolutionary communist. It examines
his quarrel with Gandhi over the goals and tactics of the Indian
independence movement and Saklatvala's not always easy relationship to
the Communist International. Above all, the study documents his role in
a radical phase of British Labour politics and the traditions of local
activism which made the Battersea North constituency such a congenial
home.
Drawn from his speeches and letters, Saklatvala's passionate and radical
voice speaks clearly to our times when the mainstream left is in
retreat. His words and his life serve to remind us that the goals of
ending inequality and making possible human liberation are too important
to be consigned to historical memory.
What Marc Wadsworth brings to this study are the insights of an active
participant in the contemporary struggles to define a Black position
within the British Left. In exploring how Saklatvala negotiated the
roles of Indian anti-imperialist, Black MP and Communist, Wadsworth has
written an important study of Black Working Class history in the 1920s
and 1930s.
Marc Wadsworth has worked as a senior news reporter at Thames
Television, Chair of the NUJ's Black Members' Council and National
Secretary of the Anti-Racist Alliance. He currently works as a freelance
journalist and broadcaster.

** Matthew French Young
Guyana the Lost El Dorado: My fifty years in the Guyanese Wilds
April 1998, £12.99  1-900715-25-2, 304 pages
As diamond prospector, gold-panner, surveyor of the uncharted bush,
hunter and builder of roads, Matthew Young spent over fifty years
working in the wild forests and savannahs of his native Guyana.
He writes vividly of the beauties and hazards of that life, of marauding
jaguars, deadly labaria snakes dropping from the trees, piranhas that
can strip the flesh from a body in seconds and thirty foot anacondas
that can squeeze the life out of a man; of battling up river against
life-threatening rapids and thunderous waterfalls.
His is a story of resourcefulness and wonder, of a practical man who
never lost his sense of the forest's mystery, who learnt a profound
respect for the culture, knowledge and skills of the Amerindians of the
interior.
This is a fascinating social history from colonial times to the 1980s,
including Young's involvement with the aftermath of the tragic mass
suicide of over 900 followers of the American cult leader Jim Jones at
Jonestown in the Guyanese interior.
Guyana: The Lost El Dorado gives an engrossing account of one of the
last untouched tropical rainforests in the world and its teeming
wildlife. It is an indispensable guidebook for the intrepid armchair
traveller, gold prospector and diamond panner!

New in 1997

**ed. Kevin Grant
The Art of David Dabydeen
May 1997, £12.99  1-900715-10-4, 232 pages
David Dabydeen is from the younger generation of Caribbean writers
living in Britain. His work has been .highly praised for its originality
and imaginative depth. In this volume leading scholars from Europe,
North America and the Caribbean discuss his poetry and fiction in the
context of the politics and culture of Britain and the Caribbean.
These studies explore David Dabydeen's concern with the plurality of
Caribbean experience, with its African, Indian, Amerindian and European
roots; the dislocation of slavery and indenture; migration and the
consequent divisions in the Caribbean psyche.
In particular, these essays focus on Dabydeen's aesthetic practice as a
consciously post-colonial writer; his exploration of the contrasts
between rural creole and standard English and their different world
visions; the power of language to subvert accepted realities; his use of
multiple masks as ways of dealing with issues of identity and the use of
destabilizing techniques in the narrative strategies he employs.
________________________________________________________________________
Hannah Bannister

Peepal Tree Press
17 King's Avenue
Leeds LS6 1QS
United Kindom
tel 44 (0) 113 2451703
fax 44 (0) 113 2459616

Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing

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Greetings, we have a new novel for you. This is E.A Markham's first
novel: Hugely entertaining, and as well crafted as you would expect from
a Professor of Creative Writing and a writer of Archie's pedigree.
Enjoy!

MARKING TIME
E.A. MARKHAM

Pewter Stapleton is drowning under a pile of marking. He teaches
creative writing at a university in Sheffield, a campus peopled with
malign cost-cutting accountants, baffled security staff and colleagues
cloning themselves.
Pewter is a brilliant comic creation, an endless lister of tasks which
are never quite completed, who is strung forever between seriousness and
send-up, a commitment to his writing and boundless cynicism about
writers and the arts industry.
From Pewter's desk and his marking, the novel radiates backwards and
forwards in time, to his childhood in the small volcanic Caribbean
island of St. Caesare and memories of his headmaster, the libidinous
Professeur Croissant and Horace his half-mad cousin, and to his
relationships with Carrington, a highly successful Caribbean writer
whose plays Pewter is editing, to Balham, a professional of the race
industry (where Pewter is a self-admitted slow learner in blackness) and
to Lee, the woman he loves, but who despairs of him as 'sporadic'.
As a novel about life and writing, factuality and invention rub
shoulders to hilarious effect as Pewter is incessantly driven to turn
his experiences, his friends and their experiences into works of drama
and fiction, maybe even you... Yet we note the awkward questions he asks
about the Academy...
Born in Montserrat, West Indies in 1939, E.A. Markham completed his
education in Britain, which has been his home since 1956. He has worked
in the theatre, in the media and is a literary editor. His publications
include collections of poems, short stories and a travel book.  He has
been writer-in-residence at the Universities of Humberside and Ulster,
has taught at the University of Newcastle and is now Professor of
Creative Writing at Sheffield Hallam University.

Specifications
ISBN: 1-900715-29-5
Price: STG£7.99 / US$13.60 / CAN$19.20
Pages: 262
Date of Publication: October 1999


HENDREE'S CURE Scenes from Madrasi Life in a New World MOSES NAGAMOOTOO Madrasis in Guyana used to pour a drop of white rum in memory of their ancestors. Moses Nagamootoo's libation is, like the best high wine, an intoxicating mix of fire, sweetness and pungency. Blending fiction and documentary, he reanimates a world now mostly gone, that of the Madrasi fishermen, market-traders, rice farmers, Kali worshippers, cricketers, turfites and see-far practitioners who inhabited the Corentyne village of Whim in the 1950s and 60s. Though only a small percentage of the quarter million Indians who came to Guyana, the South Indian Madrasis, now much dispersed through emigration to North America, played an influential role in Guyanese life. The Kali-Mai churches they established, for instance, now draw devotees from all Guyanese ethnic groups. At the heart of the narrative are the stories of the entrepreneurial Naga, like pot-salt in everything, his wife Chunoo, resolute in her sense of community and justice, and Hendree, Naga's sidekick, an idler, brilliant drummer and would-be healer. In their lives are played out the polarities which gave Madrasi life its extraordinary dynamism: its spirituality and earthiness, its respect for goodness -- and delight in scampishness, its faithfulness to Madrasi culture and openness to the culture of others, particularly the Afro-Guyanese. What is to be savoured above all in this book is its language, particularly when we hear the Whim villagers and the pungent and elegant Creole through which they represented their world and maintained their place in it. Moses Nagamootoo was born in Whim Village. Since 1992 he has been a Member of the Guyanese Parliament and presently holds the portfolio of Minister of Information. Specifications ISBN: 1-900715-45-7 Price: STG£7.99 / US$13.60 / CAN$19.20 Pages: 148 pages Date of Publication: March 2001
PAYMENT: We can accept payment by cheque or international money order in UK sterling, US dollars or Canadian dollars. Add 15% to the total for postage, but if you order five or more books, postage is free! HOW TO ORDER E-mail me hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk and tell me: a) How many copies b) The postal address to which we should send the book(s) c) Which currency you would like to pay in We'll let you know how much your order will cost, and tell you what to do next. We hope you are happy to receive details of new publications from Peepal Tree Press. If you want to be removed from our mailing list, please let us know. Best wishes Hannah ____________________________________________________________________ Peepal Tree Press -- Publishers of the Best in New Caribbean Writing 17 King's Avenue, Leeds LS6 1QS, United Kingdom tel 0113 2451703 fax 0113 2459616 e-mail hannah@peepal.demon.co.uk Our catalogue is now available by e-mail. You can choose from: 1) New Fiction (1999 titles) 2) New Poetry (1999 titles) 3) New Literary, Cultural and Historical Studies (1999 titles) 4) Backlist Fiction (1986-1998) 5) Backlist Poetry (1986-1998) 6) Backlist Literary, Cultural and Historical Studies (1986-1998)


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CURRY FLAVOUR
Lelawattee Manoo-Rahming

The poems in Curry Flavour will grab you with their exuberant
recreation of the dramas of an intensely experienced inner life.
Their imagery is sensuous, drawn from, among other sources, the
flora and fauna of the Caribbean landscape. Their voice is
erotic, humorous, subversive, prayerful, angry, revolutionary
and celebratory.
Inspired by the all-embracing nature of the Hindu Gods, these
poems attack biases and false polarities of all kinds, not least
between stereotypes of gender, the sexual and the spiritual and
the personal and the political. They express a New World, pan-
Caribbean consciousness which is rooted in a womanist
revisioning of her Indian ancestral heritage and a childhood and
youth spent on the sugar-growing Caroni plains of Trinidad.
With the ceremonial incense of prayer, the ripe mango-syrup of
erotic celebration, the pungency of wild coriander and shadon
beni of the Creole folkworld, this is a feast for all the
senses, blended together but keeping fresh all their individual
piquancy, accompanied by the sound of tassa and steelband,
simmered over a fire that burns away the jumbies of homophobia,
incest, violence and racial hatred.

Lelawattee Manoo-Rahming was born in Trinidad in 1960. A
mechanical/building services engineer and part-time college
lecturer, she now lives in Nassau, Bahamas. As well as writing
poetry and short stories, she draws and sculpts.

Paperback original
Specifications
ISBN: 1-900715-35-X
Price: UK£7.99 / US$14.95 / CAN$19.20
Pages: 120
Date of Publication: July 2000 -- copies available now!

Postage Rates per copy UK£1.00 2nd class UK£2.10 airmail
US$3.50 airmail CAN$5 airmail


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