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So Many Islands
So Many Islands: Stories from the Caribbean, Mediterranean, Indian, and Pacific Oceans | Nicholas Laughlin
3 posts | 2 read | 2 to read
Collecting new fiction, essays, and poems from seventeen countries around the world, So Many Islands brings us stories about love and protest, about childhood innocence and the traumas of history, about leaving home and trying to return. These writers's island homes may seem remote on the map, but there is nothing isolated about their compelling, fresh voices. Featuring contributions by authors from Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Bermuda, Cyprus, Grenada, Jamaica, Kiribati, Malta, Mauritius, Niue, Rotuma (Fiji), Samoa, Singapore, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Tonga, and Trinidad and Tobago. So Many Islands is the fourth publication of Peekash Press, an imprint of Akashic Books and Peepal Tree Press, committed to supporting the emergence of new Caribbean writing, and as part of the CaribLit project. From the introduction by Marlon James: I wonder if it is because we island people are surrounded by sea, hemmed in and branching out at once, that we are always in a state of flux. The sea and even the sky are definers and confiners, they have spent millions of years carving space, while at the same time giving us clear openings to map the voyage out. And, today, to be an islander is to live in one place and a thousand, to be part of a family that is way too close by for your business ever to be your own, or way too far but only a remittance cheque away. Or, put another way, to be island people means to be both coming and going. Passing and running, running and passing, as the song goes. Living there, but not always present, travelling or migrating, but never leaving. Or what has never been a new thing, but might turn into a new movement: more and more authors staying put, all the better to let their words wander.
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azulaco
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I enjoyed this collection of stories and poems set in island countries. Portraits of modern life, some reflections on the legacy of colonialism. #tonga #malta #barbados #mauritius #fiji #jamaica #kiribati #singapore #bermuda #niue #trinidadandtobago #samoa #stvincentandthegrenadines #grenada #cyprus #stlucia #readingtheamericas2023

Librarybelle I will definitely have to check this out! 1y
azulaco @Librarybelle They had one more story tagged as Antigua and Barbuda, but the setting appeared to be in Barbados. Weird error for a Caribbean publisher to make. 1y
Librarybelle That is weird! 1y
10 likes3 comments
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azulaco
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This book feels like cheating for #readingtheamericas2023…it has short stories from almost all the Caribbean islands. I‘m reading it anyway, because the stories are good, but I will only use it for one country. Sure, I could knock ten island countries off my list at once, but that‘s not really playing the game. I haven‘t gotten far enough yet to see if there‘s a #turksandcaicos story - that would be a perfect use! Available on #scribd.

BarbaraBB I know what you mean! I always use my books for just one prompt too 😀 1y
Librarybelle Stacking! 1y
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balletbookworm
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A wonderfully multi-layered collection of essays, poems, and stories from authors hailing from island nations around the globe, particularly Caribbean/Pacific. Many/all of these authors will be unfamiliar to US audiences due to the small percentage of non-US literature imported to our shores. Literature can be a window and door into the world and this collection does that - look through it into those worlds and cultures you have not yet met.

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