|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
The lyrical yet unsentimental stories in this collection offer a
portrait of the postcolonial experience of Guyanese citizens. Four
decades of history, from the 1960s to the present, are covered
through the experiences of the different characters, including
Harold, who celebrates the triumph of his Indian-supported
political party; Chuni, who encounters the revolutionary rise of a
new black middle class; and Sylvia, who confronts her Guyanese
roots during an exile in England. A sensitivity to psychological
undertones and a poetic sense of the Guyanese worldview allow these
stories to resonate with the metaphysical and mundane
transformations of the characters.
Jane Lowe Shinebourne's latest novel.
Sweetpotato and potato are expanding faster than any other food
crops in sub-Saharan Africa. There is growing investment in
research to address bottlenecks in value chains concerning these
two crops, and growing interest from the private sector in
investing in them. This book addresses five major themes on
sweetpotato and potato: policies for germplasm exchange, food
security and trade in Africa; seed systems; breeding and disease
management; post-harvest management, processing technologies and
marketing systems; nutritional value and changing behaviours.
Pairing Caribbean wounds with the grievances of political Islam,
this intriguing novel begins as a sad story of unrequited love on a
Guyanese sugar estate that descends into the obsessive world of
stalking and the temptations of Jihad. Told through the eyes of
Albert Aziz, a Guyanese Indian Muslim, the story opens with his
boyhood memory of falling from a tree and being badly injured,
after which he develops a compelling attraction to a young Chinese
girl, Alice Wong, who lives on the same sugar estate. Now, years
later, Aziz is a highly paid engineer in the Canadian nuclear
industry. Although he has a new and prosperous life, he still
nurtures racial resentments about the way he was treated as a child
and has become a supporter of radical Islam. He also begins to
fixate again on Alice and tracks her down. He finds that she is
divorced and living in England and asks her to marry him.
When she takes up a job as a reporter in Georgetown, Guyana, Sandra
Yansen must leave the close ties of family and village behind. The
city she finds is riven by racial conflict and political
turbulence.
|
|