These pioneering stories of Indian life in Trinidad includes Seepersad Naipaul’s 1943 collection, Gurudeva and other Indian Tales in its original form and adds to it... Læs mere
Volume 2 takes the story of Black Music Britain from the mid-1960s to the 1990s
Time Cleaves Itself by Jeda Pearl is a sonic meditation on memory, grief, disability, race, empathy and resilience from a Scottish womanof colour navigating belonging and claiming space.
Set in the period before and through the Bangladeshi war of independence, this novel has at its heart the continuing friendship between three boys with a love of cinema, whose loyalty into adulthood has surprising outcomes.
Explore the contemporary issues that David Oluwale's story touches upon through poetry, prose and over 40... Læs mere
Life in Wuhan and British Guiana is vividly evoked in this novel, told mainly through letters. Amidst the crumbling Chinese feudal system, and life under British colonial rule, the novel's characters seek personhood and interdependence.
These Spanish-English poems focus on the island nature of Venezuela’s Caribbean coast. Its rich observation of physical island-scapes is realised... Læs mere
A politically astute coming-of-age novel set in Guyana in the turbulent late 1970s, where Kipling Plass and his teenage friends struggle for physical and emotional survival as they contend... Læs mere
The sixth collection of this profound dialogue between two major poets from opposite sides of the world takes on mortality. Provoked by near fatal accidents, family crisis, rising temperatures... Læs mere
This rich and wide-ranging anthology is the second in a series produced by the Peepal Tree/Inscribe Readers and Writers Group. Edited by Jacob Ross, the book contains work by previously published and debut writers.
This emotionally vivid novel unfolds through a series of interconnected stories, centered on the experiences of a young white narrator growing up in a divided family. The narrative shifts... Læs mere
A breathtakingly beautiful new collection from Ian McDonald - one of the Caribbean's leading poets, and now in his nineties.