Providential

Available

Product Details

Price
$15.95  $14.83
Publisher
Akashic Books
Publish Date
Pages
96
Dimensions
6.1 X 0.4 X 8.9 inches | 0.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781617754050
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Colin Channer was born in Jamaica to a pharmacist and cop. Junot Díaz calls him one of the Caribbean Diaspora's finest writers. His poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Harvard Review, The Common, and Renaissance Noire, among other places. Channer has served as Newhouse Professor in Creative Writing at Wellesley College and Fannie Hurst Writer in Residence at Brandeis University. His many books of prose include the novella The Girl with the Golden Shoes, a very moving and mesmerizing journey in the words of Edwidge Danticat. He won the Silver Musgrave Medal in Literature in 2010 and currently lives in New England. Providential is his first poetry book.

Reviews

"Distinguished by a strong oral sense, it mixes Jamaican patois and American English, Rasta and reggae, also mixing voices in short and long forms as it progresses from the history and nature of the Jamaican police force to moving poems about 'mounds of buried hurt' in Caribbean society, where people are caught in an ordained sociology of poverty, humiliation, and other indignities. Providential begins with Channer's own father and how his days on the force affected his family and the very idea of fatherhood. It includes a retrospective vision (in New England) by the poet of his Jamaican childhood as well as a contemporary exploration of the challenges of trying to be a better father for his own teenage son . . . An interesting volume that escapes the trap of colonial exoticism."
--World Literature Today

"This is such a brilliant 'toast, ' this swift and pained and skimming history of Jamaica sweetly written by a poet with a cop dad. Providential does justice to the diasporic reality of places being 'there but not there, ' including of course America, the poet's current home. Lush lists and light-footedness and keen word choices all restore a limb to our comprehension of colonial trauma and make this one of the most lucid and telling poetry books of this exact time."
--Eileen Myles, author of Snowflake

"Channer writes with a moving vulnerability and much lyric grace, revealing new facets to familiar themes--home, family, history, and the evolving journey of self. A universal, timeless meditation."
--Chris Abani, author of The Secret History of Las Vegas

"This one is an audacious and brilliant take on noir, written with pitch-perfect rhythm and a keen eye for supple, limber turns."
--Lorna Goodison, author of From Harvey River

"Extremely worthwhile...Channer brings an Oliver Senior like narrativity to these sharp character sketches, and by deploying his keen novelist's eye he can trace the actions and effects of power on these men and their families in interesting and compelling language."
--Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal

"Distinguished by a strong oral sense, it mixes Jamaican patois and American English, Rasta and reggae, also mixing voices in short and long forms as it progresses from the history and nature of the Jamaican police force to moving poems about 'mounds of buried hurt' in Caribbean society, where people are caught in an ordained sociology of poverty, humiliation, and other indignities. Providential begins with Channer's own father and how his days on the force affected his family and the very idea of fatherhood. It includes a retrospective vision (in New England) by the poet of his Jamaican childhood as well as a contemporary exploration of the challenges of trying to be a better father for his own teenage son . . . An interesting volume that escapes the trap of colonial exoticism."
--World Literature Today

"This is such a brilliant 'toast, ' this swift and pained and skimming history of Jamaica sweetly written by a poet with a cop dad. Providential does justice to the diasporic reality of places being 'there but not there, ' including of course America, the poet's current home. Lush lists and light-footedness and keen word choices all restore a limb to our comprehension of colonial trauma and make this one of the most lucid and telling poetry books of this exact time."
--Eileen Myles, author of Snowflake

"Channer writes with a moving vulnerability and much lyric grace, revealing new facets to familiar themes--home, family, history, and the evolving journey of self. A universal, timeless meditation."
--Chris Abani, author of The Secret History of Las Vegas

"This one is an audacious and brilliant take on noir, written with pitch-perfect rhythm and a keen eye for supple, limber turns."
--Lorna Goodison, author of From Harvey River