April 12, 2010

Who's Your Daddy? in Brooklyn






On Tuesday, April 13, 2010, I'll be reading with Charmaine Hamilton-Valere of Signifyin’ Guyana  @ St Francis College – Callahan Center, 182 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, NY 11210 for the Poets & Passion: Writers on Writing series. The program begins at 7:00 p.m. 






Charmaine Hamilton-Valere


This creator and curator of Signifyin’ Guyana, an internet blog that celebrates Caribbean literature. In fact Signifyin’ Guyana, often at the vanguard in championing new work, facilitates discourse on terms, words, and ideas that concern many in the Guyanese (and wider Caribbean) Diaspora, exploring questions of culture, quality and art. Widely quoted across the blogosphere, she modestly states that she relies on her own significant though unpublished, unpolished opinions. Hamilton-Valere is a “Better Hope” gyal, who attended Bishops High School, and now lives with her family in the US.




Geoffrey Philp


This Jamaica Collage alumnus is the author of a novel, Benjamin, My Son; two collections of short stories, five poetry collections and a children’s book. His work has been anthologized in both the Oxford Book of Caribbean Short Stories and the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Florida Arts Council, the Sauza Stay Pure Award, James Michener fellowship at the University of Miami, and an artist-in-residence at the Seaside Institute. Philp is the creator of a literary blog that reports on Caribbean and South Florida authors.






Who’s Your Daddy? And Other Stories


Whether set in the Jamaican past or the Miami present, whether dealing wittily with sexual errantry or inventively with manifestations of the uncanny (when Brother Belnavis tangles with a vampire), Geoffrey Philp’s second collection displays again the gold stamp of the born story-teller. But beyond their capacity to engage and entertain the reader, these are the multi-layered stories of a perceptive and humane observer of contemporary life. In particular, an acute empathy with troubled childhoods and adolescence offers adult readers a rewarding reconnection with the turbulence of earlier selves.


Time: April 13, 2010 
7pm to 9:30pm


St Francis College – Callahan Center
  182 Remsen Street (Clinton & Court Sts)
Brooklyn, NY 11210
Phone:
718-783-8345

***







Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

4 comments:

Yvonne McCalla Sobers said...

All the best, Geoffrey.

Yvonne

Geoffrey Philp said...

Give thanks, Yvonne!

Rethabile said...

How did it go?

Geoffrey Philp said...

I'll post today, Ret!

Thanks for asking.