
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Winston Farrell: Green Reader, Earth Spirit

Thursday, June 2, 2011
Green Readings 2011...Just lighting up our corner of the world

Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Frank Birbalsingh's review of Thomas Armstrong's Of Water and Rock
Thomas Armstrong, Of Water and Rock, Montreal, DC Books, 2010, pp.330. ISBN 978-1-897190-60-9. / Reviewer: Frank Birbalsingh, Indo-Caribbean World (2011)
Whatever his attraction to Barbados, it seems strange that a bright, sun-filled Caribbean island should provide the setting for distinctly Gothic undertones in Armstrong’s story of a young Canadian, Edward Hamblin who, without any previous knowledge of Barbados, arrives alone on the island in 1969 to assume a legacy bequeathed to him by his father’s aunt Sarah. For one thing, Edward had never met his great aunt who lived and died in Barbados. For another, he knows just as little about his father who was born in Barbados but had left home when he [Edward] was very young. All Edward knows, from his black Bajan lawyer Chesterfield Cumberbatch, is that he has inherited Hamblin Hall cottage in Barbados.
The novel opens with Cumberbatch meeting Edward at the airport and taking him to Hamblin Hall cottage. It is an eye-opener to meet neighbours such as Sissy Brathwaite, an old woman desperately struggling to survive in her own house and land, his servant Undine who had previously worked for Sarah, and Richard Clermont, alias Doc, who starts life as a brilliant scholar only to decline into an eccentric, best known for his prophetic pose in talking to trees or searching for black coral in caves. Edward also meets white neighbours – the Collymores – James and his two grown-up daughters Judith and Mary, and from these brief encounters realises how different a society he has come to: one that until 1966 was a British colony most of whose history consisted of white-owned sugar plantations maintained by the labour of African slaves. This is why the Bajan population is divided between mainly African-descended Blacks and a small number of Whites, with some mixed blood people of African/European stock. Sissy, Undine, Doc and a professional like Cumberbatch are from one side of Bajan history with the Collymores on the other.
As Edward gropes his way through this unfamiliar culture, conditioned by one of the most grievous examples in all history of man’s inhumanity to man, Gothic elements emerge from his puzzlement at evasive answers to questions that he asks his neighbours, awareness of secrets in their past, and growing suspicion of dark, sinister and mysterious dealings on their island paradoxically regarded as a holiday paradise of sun, blue sea and white sand. The paradox reminds us of Jean Rhys’s comparison of the Caribbean island in her classic novel Wide Sargasso Sea to the Biblical Garden of Eden corrupted by abuse from primal human sin. Sissy’s nephew RJ catches the spirit of Rhys’s comment when he tells Edward: “People like Auntie [Sissy] learn tuh take abuse and say nuthin. An people like dem Collymores ain’t change ever since... Dey tink dat because dey white, dey better den we. Dey abuse our women an nobody ain’t ever held tuh account.” (p.134) RJ puts his finger on the primal Bajan and Caribbean sin of slavery and its legacy of abusive relationships between white master and black slave.
This legacy of racial abuse is built into the very structure of Bajan society with its clear contrast between a largely black working class and white families like the Collymores. At a typical white soiree, for instance, held at the Collymores, Edward meets the family of Rupert Weatherby the British High Commissioner to Barbados, and observes the difference between his own Canadian views and the racist attitudes of both his hosts and their visitors. Worse still, in a later scene where Sissy sells sugar cakes at her market stall, Mary Collymore chaperones a white child Liliane who accepts a sugar cake generously offered by Sissy, but Mary rudely knocks the sugar cake out of Liliane’s hand and angrily rebukes Sissy: “How dare you? ... You dirty woman. Who knows where your hands have been?” (p.126) Mary also turns on Liliane: “don’t ever take anything from these people.” (p.126) It is a climactic scene whose full significance cannot be explained here without giving away the denouement of the novel.
Suffice to say that the denouement of Of Water and Rock relies on the curse of race in Bajan history and a suspenseful story of Edward’s long search and discovery of his great aunt’s lost diary in which answers are revealed to questions about his father, the Collymores, Sissy and Barbados. In structure alone, Armstrong deserves great credit for technical expertise, rare in a first novel, which plunges his narrator boldly into an exotic voyage of discovery, through stage by suspenseful stage, and brings him through to the end where older characters like Sissy Brathwaite and James Collymore are dead, all passion is spent, old sores tended if not healed, and a much chastened Edward looks forward to a joint future living with Judith Collymore.
As someone who is Bajan neither by birth nor upbringing, Armstrong should also be given extra credit for catching the verve and vibrancy of Bajan speech. RJ’s comment above, for instance, could not convey the true horror of Bajan history without its combination of simple, direct expression, raw idiom, or lilting rhythm and intonation. There is similar rawness and physical directness in Doc’s response to schoolboy taunts: “Uh gin tuh pelt wunnuh wit dis here rockstone, yuh black savages,” (p.115) and it registers a uniquely Caribbean style of expression which fully captures what Derek Walcott describes as “the passion and wrong” of Caribbean history.
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Of Water and Rock: The launch, Tuesday March 8 at the University

ArtsEtc will be hosting the Barbados launch of Thomas Armstrong’s award-winning novel, Of Water and Rock.
The launch is part of a busy 2011 season for ArtsEtc which sees it hosting Green Readings for the fourth consecutive year (stay tuned for more news of that), and pursuing a range of independent publishing and creative projects.
We are particularly proud and excited to be associated with Thomas Armstrong and the launch of his debut novel which has been provoking passionate reviews and response since its May 2010 publication by DC Books in Montreal.
(Click here to read what Philip Nanton had to say about it in the Caribbean Review of Books; and here to read in full Frank Birbalsingh’s review in Indo-Caribbean World.)
Of Water and Rock – which was shortlisted for Barbados’ Frank Collymore Endowment Award (2nd Place), and won the George Lamming Prize (NIFCA 2010) – offers a wondrous, humorous look at Torontonian Edward Hamblin’s first trip to Barbados. It’s just after Independence, and Edward has come to reclaim his Bajan roots: his Great Aunt Sarah’s cottage at Hamblin Hall. Soon an odd fit among an endearing group in the adjoining village, he literally unearths a secret about his family’s heritage that will rock the foundations of his beliefs and those of his newfound friends on the island. Armstrong’s ear for the cadences of the heart and the rhythms of a people lend understated grace and authenticity to a novel of powerful feeling and true redemption.
About the author:
Canadian Thomas Armstrong visited Barbados for the first time in 1979 and fell in love with more than the island. From the very first, the island and its people impressed upon him a sense of time and place that was both wondrous and sad. Married to a Barbadian in 1980, it wasn’t until the passing of his wife’s parents and of his own father that Armstrong began to write. Penning his father’s eulogy ignited an undiscovered passion. He dedicated a short story, “Flying in God’s Face,” later published in Poui, the literary journal of the University of the West Indies (Cave Hill), to his mother-in-law, the matriarchal head of his Barbadian family. It became the seed from which his first novel, Of Water and Rock, would grow. Armstrong is educated in Mathematics and Science, currently makes a living as a software developer, and divides his time between Canada and Barbados. He is still married and has two children and is working on his next novel.
Of Water and Rock will be launched in Barbados on Tuesday, March 8 at the University Bookstore on Cave Hill Campus at 4:30 p.m. Come, meet Tom and talk to him about his writing. We look forward to seeing you there. Dress: elegantly casual; refreshments served. For more information on obtaining copies of the book, please contact the author at thomas.armstrong@sympatico.ca or email artsetc@sunbeach.net – LMD
Of Water and Rock; Thomas Armstrong (DC Books, Montreal 2010) (ISBN 978-1-897190-59-3)
Monday, September 20, 2010
Booklovers walk the talk on October 2

THE Barbados Association of Reading (BAR) is staging a WALK FOR LITERACY on Saturday, October 2. The start time is 7:30 a.m. outside the National Library in Independence Square, Bridgetown, and the walk route takes participants through Nelson Street, Bayville and Beckles Road, ending with breakfast, readings and games on Browne's Beach. The association has come up with the fun idea of inviting walkers to dress as characters from their favourite stories and novels.
ArtsEtc asked Cheryl Williams, BAR’s public relations officer, which fictional character she would dress as, and why? She also shared her views on literacy in Barbados:
ArtsEtc: So, who would you walk as?
Cheryl Williams: I'm thinking of Mary Poppins. I've always loved her, and of course there is always a teacher's fantasy of getting some of your naughtier pupils to behave. Ms Poppins is a nanny, but she sticks around for cool adventures where everyday experiences seem magical.
AE: What are the main objectives of the Literacy Walk on October 2?
CW: As an International Reading Association Caribbean affiliate, we are charged with raising literacy awareness within the community. The Barbados Association of Reading’s Literacy Walk is a community literacy initiative designed to highlight the importance of literacy within urban communities. It aims to mobilize BAR membership, writers, librarians, schools, churches, and community groups in the area to make a public statement on the importance of reading.
AE: The walk route covers areas that have been immortalised in print by some of our Barbadian writers. Will there be readings from such works at strategic points on the day?
CW: Yes, we will do our best to bring out Barbadian writers, particularly those who write for children or who are from the area, such as the immortal Kamau. The readings will be on Browne's Beach.
AE: What other ways would you suggest interested groups (writers, bookstores, teachers, communities, etc.) get involved in an ongoing basis to promote literacy in Barbados?
CW: Try a less traditional approach. Everyone wants to give remedial lessons, but many kids are reminded of the failures of school and go to these reluctantly. But the kid who likes football will probably read a book on Cristiano Ronaldo or one on the finer points of football. My sister who hated to read at school is now a deacon in her church; now in our house we fall over books by TD Jakes and on Christian theology. She will probably never read many of the “classics,” but she reads a great deal!
AE: Tell us briefly a bit more about BAR.
CW: The Barbados Association of Reading is a non-profit, charitable organisation established to promote literacy in Barbados. It is a Caribbean affiliate of the International Reading Association headquartered in the United States. Membership consists of literacy professionals and volunteers who meet monthly for educational sessions and discussions on literacy issues. The organisation also encourages and supports literacy projects in the classroom and community, and provides networking and training opportunities for literacy professionals.
AE: What is your major bugbear about literature in schools?
CW: Most reading is done outside of the English classroom, and a lot of subject teachers refuse to encourage good reading skills. They think it's not their issue.
Also, I am always incensed at what the powers-that-be choose for young people to read. One of my classes was up in arms because it felt that the poems in their poetry books were boring and macabre (my word). To keep their interest, I had to assign them the task of putting together an anthology for kids.
AE: What are you currently reading?
CW: Actually, I am reading several books. I'm relaxing with The Naked Baron, a Victorian bodice ripper. For work, I'm introducing the kids to The Silver Sword and A Kestrel for a Knave.
• ArtsEtc encourages everyone to come out and support the Barbados Walk for Literacy on October 2. For more information, visit BAR’s website. – LMD
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Who would YOU come dressed as?




Something is happening with the Bajan novel...


OVER the last decade in Barbados, we’ve seen the publication of novels by Thomas Armstrong, Nicole Blades, Austin Clarke, Alvin Cummins, Nailah Folami Imojah, Margaret Knight, Glenville Lovell, Arnold Ward, to name a few of our more familiar writers in this form. This summer, Karen Lord’s name was added to that not-so-short list. Something, it seems, is happening again with the Barbadian novel, and her Redemption in Indigo, recently released from Small Beer Press, is very much part of that event.
What the books by these writers have in common is an attempt to reinterpret the situation of a people, namely Caribbean, and remind them of the significance of their experience, of its value and currency, to them and their wider community. Where Redemption in Indigo stands somewhat apart is in its use of fantasy to tell its tale, and, to a lesser extent, in its own preoccupations with the nature of choice, free will, fate, and chance.
One of the many pleasures of Lord’s debut novel is its protagonists: we watch both Paama (the girl married to a fatally licorish husband) and the indigo lord (the man with the magic coucou stick) grow in strength and humility and understanding of their humanity. Karen’s commitment to the redemptive powers of storytelling, and to the hope our stories can inspire, is uncompromising, fierce. This is from the end of the book:
“…there are those who utterly, utterly fear the dreaded Moral of a Story. They consider it an affront to their sensibilities and a painful presumption on the part of the storyteller. They are put off by the idea that a story might have anything useful to say and, as a result, all the other joys a tale has to offer them are immediately soured. I save my most scathing remarks for them. Do you go through life with your eyes blindfolded and your ears stopped? Everything teaches, everyone preaches, all have a gospel to sell! Better the one who is honest and open in declaring an agenda than the one who fools you into believing that they are only spinning a pretty fancy for beauty’s sake.”
Let me repeat: there is something happening in Barbadian arts. It’s as if our writers—on the page, stage and in film—are attempting to reboot our literature. Lamming’s last novel was Natives of My Person in 1972. Austin Clarke’s been producing, but there has been a sense of overworking old themes in recent, award-winning novels. In-between, Timothy Callender gave us How Music Came to the Ainchan People; that was in 1979…. The markers are a little arbitrary, but you get the drift.
Whatever’s happening, it’s easy to be part of it: by buying Redemption in Indigo, reading it, talking about it, passing it on, and then checking out all the other authors mentioned above (and those not) from our canon. There’s a vision our writers have of us, or for us, that’s once more emerging: one that encompasses Barbados yesterday, today and especially tomorrow.
— Robert Edison Sandiford (Adapted from opening remarks made at the launch of Karen Lord’s Redemption in Indigo at Ocean Spray, Barbados, August 6, 2010. This blog entry is part of ArtsEtc’s series on literature and literacy for September, Literacy Awareness Month.)