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Caribbean Beat — January/February 2017 (#143)

A calendar of events; music, film, and book reviews; travel features; people profiles, and much more.

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No Safeguards, by H. Nigel Thomas (Guernica<br />

Editions, 375 pp, ISBN 9781550719840)<br />

H. Nigel Thomas’s No Safeguards<br />

confronts the chained spectres<br />

of homegrown secrecy, seen<br />

through the eyes of two<br />

brothers who contend with<br />

their gayness while growing<br />

up. <strong>Caribbean</strong> respectability<br />

politics clash against the<br />

brothers’ desires to live on<br />

their own terms, prompting<br />

frank and forthright musings<br />

on the nature of selfhood, of<br />

stifling theology, of the bitterly<br />

inevitable yet dogged quest for personal happiness.<br />

Thomas, who was born in St Vincent and is based in<br />

Canada, wields his narration with all the vulnerability of an<br />

open bruise: through the intertwined perspectives of Jay<br />

and Paul, several communities clash and converge, each<br />

desperately doing what they believe is right. Between<br />

Montreal and St Vincent lies the emotional freight of<br />

many worlds: Thomas reveals them to us, showing in<br />

sensitive prose that return journeys, in either direction,<br />

often cost their weight in bribes, guilt, and Hail Marys.<br />

Columbus, the Moor, by Charles Matz (House<br />

of Nehesi, 104 pp, ISBN 9780996224215)<br />

Intrepid explorer or savager of<br />

the <strong>Caribbean</strong>’s First Peoples:<br />

depending on which history<br />

books you read, Christopher<br />

Columbus means different<br />

things to different tribes.<br />

Columbus, the Moor is a<br />

genre-bending, multilingual<br />

approach to mapping the<br />

very stars in the sky, and the<br />

motions of the tides, during<br />

Columbus’s advent in the West<br />

Indies. Written in English,<br />

Spanish, French, and Italian, Matz’s focus on the cultural<br />

collisions and devastations of 1492 are decidedly poetic,<br />

an interpretive and lyrically lavish fusion of fact and<br />

speculation. At once an existential dilemma, a truthseeking<br />

mission, and a treatise on madness and the sea’s<br />

infinite caprice, Columbus, the Moor sings a shanty of<br />

curious inventiveness, infusing an old, violent history<br />

with unexpected colour and consideration. Whether<br />

you respect Columbus or revile him, this slender yet<br />

imaginative poem-drama will have you consider his<br />

journey from startling, inquisitive shores.<br />

Reviews by Shivanee Ramlochan, Bookshelf editor<br />

WWW.CARIBBEAN-AIRLINES.COM 43

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