Immerse, Literature, People, Trinidad and Tobago
By Nicholas Laughlin ● Issue 155 (January/February 2019)
Claire Adam: “I’ve always felt, ask me where I’m from!” | Own words
Claire Adam, Trinidad-born novelist, on learning to observe, the usefulness of honest criticism, and the notion of “home” — as told to Nicholas Laughlin
Immerse, Film and Television, Music, People, Jamaica
By Nazma Muller ● Issue 154 (November/December 2018)
The inimitable Grace Jones | Backstory
She’s an instantly recognisable icon of music and fashion, with a forty-year career in the limelight. And the inimitable Grace Jones is Jamaican to the core, says Nazma Muller
Immerse, Literature, People, Trinidad and Tobago
By Shivanee Ramlochan ● Issue 154 (November/December 2018)
Kevin Jared Hosein: a writer with a plan | Closeup
His recent win of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize affirms that Kevin Jared Hosein is a rising literary star. But his success didn’t come from nowhere, Shivanee Ramlochan discovers — rather, it’s the achievent of a patient devotion to writing, despite the odds
Immerse, Music, People, Trinidad and Tobago
By Caroline Taylor ● Issue 154 (November/December 2018)
Jeanine De Bique: “It doesn’t matter where you come from” | Own words
Jeanine De Bique, Trinidad-born classical singer, on the influence of her upbringing, and why Trinis “could do anything” — as told to Caroline Taylor
Immerse, History, United Kingdom, Caribbean Diaspora
By Caribbean Beat ● Issue 153 (September/October 2018)
Remembering Windrush
When the Empire Windrush docked at Tilbury in 1948, its West Indian passengers didn’t know their arrival would become a historical watershed. A new exhibition at the British Library explains how the Windrush generation changed Britain for good
Immerse, Music, People, Dominica
By Paul Crask ● Issue 153 (September/October 2018)
Michele Henderson: “I woke up with an entire song in my head”
Singer-songwriter Michele Henderson, performing at October’s World Creole Music Festival, on her musical childhood and her transition to the international stage — as told to Paul Crask, at her home in Grand Bay, Dominica
Immerse, Arts and Architecture, Caribbean Diaspora
By Caribbean Beat ● Issue 152 (July/August 2018)
Turn of the tide | Panorama
A new exhibition of contemporary artists explores the “submarine” links among the islands of the Caribbean archipelago. A portfolio of artworks from Relational Undercurrents, now on view in New York City
Immerse, Music, People, Trinidad and Tobago
By Laura Dowrich-Phillips ● Issue 152 (July/August 2018)
Nailah Blackman: welcome to the evolution | Snapshot
With music in her bloodline, T&T’s Nailah Blackman was almost destined for a career behind the microphone. She was the breakthrough performer of Carnival 2017, still a teenager — but, as she tells Laura Dowrich-Phillips, her ambitions go beyond soca, to another stage of musical evolution