3/22/2011

From Cane Field to the Sea Now in Print

Dear Poets of the Caribbean readers,

I am pleased to let you know that the print version of From Cane Field to the Sea is now available from Wordclay Publishing Company.

The e-book  version was published by  Smashwords on March 1st.

Thank you for your interest in Caribbean poetry and I do hope you are finding the postings interesting. The last post was my interview with Easton Lee, Chinese-Jamaican poet and priest.

April is poetry month, so stay tuned for another interesting Caribbean poet.

3/17/2011

Easton Lee on Caribbean Poetry, etc.

Today, I had a delightful interview with poet of the month, Easton Lee, who now resides in Florida. He is still busy with both writing and ministry, and shared some interesting thoughts with me.

Yasmin: What are your thoughts on the Caribbean literary scene?

Easton Lee: The Caribbean is producing a lot of good work right now and we have a talented crop of younger writers. However, there are some works that are bad and some that are in between. The availability of new literary prizes is also a positive thing.

Yasmin: Since writing From Behind the Counter, what other works have you done?

Easton Lee: My follow-up collection to From Behind the Counter is Encounters. I have also written a novel, Run Big Fraid. I am constantly writing.

Yasmin: You are probably the most well-known Chinese-Jamaican poet. Are there other Chinese-Jamaican poets that you know of?

Easton Lee: There are Chinese-Jamaicans writing in other genres. I am thinking of Father Richard HoLung who writes hymns, as well as Ray Chen, who does mostly photo-journalism.

Yasmin: In poems like "My Mother is a People", "Who Fa Granny", and "To a Mother Resting", you highlight the positive contributions of women. Growing up, did the women in your life play a positive role?

Easton Lee: I believe that Jamaican women have made a solid contribution. Generally, though, both  Jamaican men and women, the ordinary and unheralded folks have done so much. However, we tend to focus on the spectacular and sometimes the more prominent in society and forget what these ordinary citizens have done. Growing up behind the counter of our shop, I had a chance to meet and observe these hard working people who came from all walks of life - our customers, my mother's friends, people in the church and I heard their stories. I also noticed that it was their faith that kept them going.

Yasmin: You were ordained an Anglican priest in 2000. What moved you in this direction?

Easton Lee: Actually, I grew up in the Anglican church and knew from around age seven that I wanted to be a priest. In fact, when I met my wife, I told her I wanted to be a priest and she thought I was joking. However, I got married, raised children, and other events came in the way and the timing was not right until 2000. Yet, I knew all along that I would become a priest.

Yasmin: How are you able to balance ministry and your poetry writing?

Easton Lee: I am now retired from ministry. However, I assist as a volunteer at the Miami Gardens Episcopal Church of the Holy Family. I can now balance my own time and pursue things that I want to do.

Yasmin: Any advice for new poets?

Easton Lee: Keep writing. Don't stop. The minute you stop, the pipe dries up.

Yasmin: Are you planning on doing any poetry readings soon?

Easton Lee: I will be doing a poetry reading at Ryerson University's, English Department during the week of July 24. It is a symposium on the Chinese Shopkeeper. I have also been invited to read in Dubai, which has a small Jamaican community and I am thinking about that.

Yasmin: Thank you for taking time to share your thougths with me and best wishes on the reading in Toronto.

Easton Lee: Thank you too. Blessings.

3/15/2011

The Poet-Priest

An interesting fact about Easton Lee, our poet of the month, is that he was ordained an Anglican priest in 2000 and now serves at the St. Margaret's Anglican Church in Kingston, Jamaica. Lee studied radio broadcasting at the BBC, London, and theatre and television in the United States. He is the recipient of the Commander of the Order of Distinction and the Silver Musgrave Medal from the Institute of Jamaica.

Many of Lee's poems in From Behind the Counter reflect his spirituality, such as Sunday, Reflections, Holy Thursday Letter, and Prayer at Pentecost. Easton Lee has written four books and has directed a number of plays, the most popular of which was The Rope and The Cross.

3/04/2011

Read An E-Book Week

March 6-12 is Read An E-Book Week. During next week, lots of retailers will be offering huge discounts on e-books. Be sure to check out these deals at the many e-book publishing sites, including Smashwords.

For my Poets of the Caribbean readers, for e-book week, I am offering a 50% discount on my new poetry collection, From Cane Field to the Sea, published by Smashwords.

So, be sure to read an e-book next week.

3/02/2011

From Cane Field to the Sea Is Finally Completed!

Dear Poets of the Caribbean readers,

I am so excited to let you know that after an extremely long gestational period and disappointment due to publisher rejection, my first poetry collection, From Cane Field to the Sea, was finally published today by Smashwords. Please see my previous post on publishing options via Smashwords.

I invite you to sample some of my poems from the collection and as usual, I would love to have your comments. Also, you can be the first to offer a review on Smashwords.

A complimentary copy of the book will be provided to the first reader who posts a comment before the end of this week.

3/01/2011

Easton Lee, Talented Chinese-Jamaican Poet

Our spotlight in March is on Easton Lee, a very talented Jamaican poet. I enjoyed reading his collection, From Behind the Counter: Poems from a rural Jamaican Experience.

Lee was born in the town of Wait-a-bit (Yes, Jamaica has these interesting place names!) in the western Jamaica parish of Trelawny to a Chinese father and a Jamaican mother of mixed ancestry. The poems in From Behind the Counter relate his experience as a child working behind the counter of his parents' grocery store in rural Jamaica in the 1930s.

Most of the Chinese who came to Jamaica eventually set up small businesses such as grocery shops and other enterprises. They have made tremendous contributions to the economic and social development of Jamaica.

I am particularly pleased to focus on Easton Lee this month and to highlight the contributions of Chinese Jamaicans to the Jamaican and Caribbean literary scene. I often get surprised reactions whenever I share that Jamaica has a fairly sizeable Chinese and East Indian population (our motto is in fact Out of Many, One People).

Some of my favorite poems from the collection are: My Mother is a People, Who Fa Granny, Outside Pickney and Negril Sunset (If you have been to Negril, you will definitely appreciate Negril Sunset).

I hope you will enjoy the postings this month on this creative son of the Jamaican soil!