Lawrence Scott FRSL (born in Trinidad, 1943) is a novelist and short-story writer from Trinidad and Tobago, who divides his time between London and Port of Spain.[1] He has also worked as a teacher of English and Drama at schools in London and in Trinidad. Scott's novels have been awarded (1998) and shortlisted (1992, 2004) for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and thrice nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award (for Aelred's Sin in 2000,[2] Night Calypso in 2006[3] and Light Falling on Bamboo in 2014).[4] His stories have been much anthologised and he won the Tom-Gallon Short-Story Award in 1986.
Lawrence Scott | |
---|---|
Born | 1943 (age 80–81) |
Alma mater | St Clare's Hall Oxford; Manchester University |
Occupation(s) | Writer and teacher |
Notable work | Witchbroom (1992) Aelred's Sin (1998) Light Falling on Bamboo (2014) |
Awards | Tom-Gallon Trust Award; Commonwealth Writers' Prize |
Website | www |
Life and career
editBorn in Trinidad on a sugarcane estate[5] where his father was the manager for Tate & Lyle,[6] Lawrence Scott is a descendant of Trinidad's French and German creoles. "His father's side came from Germany in the 1830s and were called Schoener. His mother's family, the Lange dynasty, were French-descended and part of an established white Creole community."[7]
Scott was educated at Boys' RC School, San Fernando, Trinidad (1950–54), and by the Benedictine monks at the Abbey School, Mount Saint Benedict, Tunapuna (1955–62), before leaving at the age of 19 for England.[8] There, he attended Prinknash Abbey, Gloucester, studying philosophy and theology (1963–67), St Clare's Hall Oxford, gaining a BA Hons. degree in English Language & Literature (1968–72), and Manchester University, earning a Certificate in Education, English & Drama (Distinction) in 1972–73.[9]
Between 1973 and 2006, Scott worked as a teacher (of English and Drama) at various schools in London and in Trinidad, including Sedgehill, London; Thomas Calton Comprehensive, London; Presentation College, San Fernando, Trinidad; Aranguez Junior Secondary, Trinidad; Tulse Hill Comprehensive and Archbishop Tenison's, London. Between 1983 and 2006, he taught Literature and Creative Writing at City & Islington Sixth Form College, London.[9]
In parallel to his teaching, Scott's career as a creative writer includes the publication since the 1990s of novels and collections of short stories. His stories have also been broadcast on BBC radio and have been anthologised internationally, notably in The Penguin Book of Caribbean Short Stories, The Oxford Book of Caribbean Short Stories and Our Caribbean, A Gathering of Lesbian & Gay Writing from the Antilles (Duke University Press). He has published poetry in several anthologies and journals, including Colours of a New Day: Writing for South Africa (Lawrence & Wishart, 1990), Caribbean New Voices 1 (Longman, 1995), Trinidad and Tobago Review, Cross/Cultures 60 (Editions Rodopi B.V. Amsterdam – New York, 2002), Agenda and Wasafiri. In addition he is the author of numerous essays, reviews and interviews on the work of other Caribbean writers, including Earl Lovelace[10] and Derek Walcott.[11]
Scott was a Writer-in-Residence at the University of the West Indies (UWI) in 2004. In 2006–09, he was a senior research fellow of The Academy for Arts, Letters, Culture and Public Affairs at the University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT).
His academic research has included the Golconda Research/Writing Project, an oral history project in Trinidad.[12] He has also researched extensively the life and times of Trinidad's 19th-century artist Michel-Jean Cazabon,[13] which work informs his 2012 novel Light Falling on Bamboo.[14]
In 2019, Scott was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.[15][16]
Writing
editIn 1986, Scott's short story "The House of Funerals" won the Tom-Gallon Award.[17] His published books include novels, a short-story collection, a work of non-fiction and a volume of poems. His partner since the 1970s, Jenny Green, also a teacher, is his first reader and she is the author of a memoir entitled Somewhere Round the Corner.[18][19][20]
Scott's first novel, Witchbroom (Allison and Busby, 1992), was shortlisted for a Commonwealth Writers' Prize and was broadcast as a Book at Bedtime on BBC Radio 4[17] in 1993, abridged by Margaret Busby in eight episodes, produced by Marina Salandy-Brown and read by the author.[21][22] A 25th-anniversary edition of Witchbroom, published by Papillote Press, was launched in Trinidad at PaperBased bookshop in Port-of-Spain on 18 March 2017, with a keynote address by Earl Lovelace and readings by Ken Ramchand, Barbara Jenkins and Marina Salandy-Brown.[23] Witchbroom was described by Trinidad and Tobago Newsday as "a breathtaking novel, filled with memorable characters and important history."[24] According to the review in BookBlast, "Lawrence Scott weaves a magical, lush tapestry of words and images, bringing alive local legends and family narratives; and redressing written histories. The impact of the events recounted still resonate in Caribbean society today. A quasi-historical novel, Witchbroom recounts the story of a colonial white enclave on an offshore island through muddled memories. ... The stories are bewitching and highly disturbing. The reader surfs a tidal wave of addictive fascination like a Dickensian tricoteuse sitting beside the guillotine in Paris watching heads roll during the public executions of 1793-4.[25]
Of his 1994 story collection Ballad for the New World, Publishers Weekly said: "Scott ... has filled his collection of 12 short stories with all the rich nuances of the Caribbean, creating a convincing backdrop that allows even the most sedentary armchair traveler to visualize each tale's progression."[26]
Scott's second novel, Aelred's Sin (1998), described by Raoul Pantin as "a fine and sensitive and compassionate book…a worthwhile contribution to the hallowed tradition of West Indian literature",[27] won a Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book (Canada & Caribbean) in 1999. Night Calypso (2004), Scott's next novel, was described by Mike Phillips in The Guardian as "unique in being a serious, knowledgeable and beautifully written treatise about a little-known corner of experience and its relationship to a wider world",[28] while Chris Searle in the Morning Star called it "an educative, startling and moving reading experience".[29]
Scott's 2012 novel, Light Falling on Bamboo, was called "really a fascinating read" by Verdel Bishop in the Trinidad Express.[30] Set in early 19th-century Trinidad, while the novel is a re-imagining of the life of the celebrated landscape painter Cazabon, according to Monique Roffey's review in The Independent Scott captures so much more. This novel shows us the dark 'truth of an age' in a small corner of the New World, once dependent on slave labour."[31] For the Financial Times reviewer, Scott has "conjured a convincing fictional portrait ... in this beautifully subtle and sensitive novel."[32] Selwyn Cudjoe's review stated: "Lawrence Scott has written an important historical romance. [...] the loving attention that Scott devotes to detail, sensitivity to light and colour, and his determination to capture the many tones of his landscape and people give his romance a translucence and luminosity that is wondrous to behold. We owe him a debt of gratitude for offering us this way of seeing during this period in our history."[33]
In 2015, Scott's collection of stories Leaving By Plane Swimming Back Underwater was published by Papillote Press.[34] Alexander Lucie-Smith wrote in the Catholic Herald: "Scott’s writing resembles that fretwork familiar from decaying porches and window frames: intricate, almost rococo, and because Trinidad is such a multi-layered place, because nothing is simple, his style is perfectly suited to his subject. Scott comes nearest to any English language author I know to carrying off that difficult task of evoking a place that is real and at the same time completely other."[35]
Scott's 2021 work, Dangerous Freedom (Papillote Press), is a historical novel that draws on the life story of Dido Belle.[36][37][38] A review for Pluto Magazine by Dominique Lancastre praised the novel as an "outstanding piece of literature ... which deserves to be read by all."[39]
Looking for Cazabon, the debut collection of poetry by Scott, was published in 2024. It comprises poems inspired by the research he did into the life and times of painter Michel-Jean Cazabon for the 2012 novel Light Falling on Bamboo.[40]
Selected awards and honours
edit- 1986: Tom-Gallon Short-Story Award
- 1999: Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book (Canada & Caribbean), for Aelred's Sin
- 2019: Elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
- 2023: Honorary degree (DLitt) from the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus[41][42]
Bibliography
editNovels
edit- Witchbroom (Allison & Busby, 1992, ISBN 978-0850318180; Heinemann Caribbean Writers Series, 1993, ISBN 978-0435989330) – shortlisted for a Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best First Book (1993); read on BBC Radio 4's Book at Bedtime (1993; adapted by Margaret Busby, produced by Marina Salandy-Brown).[43] 25th-anniversary edition, Papillote Press, 2017.[44]
- Aelred's Sin (Allison & Busby, 1998, ISBN 978-0749003746) – winner of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book in Canada & Caribbean (1999).
- Night Calypso (Allison & Busby, 2004, ISBN 978-0749081652) – shortlisted for a Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book in Canada & the Caribbean (2005).
- Light Falling on Bamboo (Tindal Street Press, 2012, ISBN 978-1781251584).
- Dangerous Freedom (Papillote Press, 2021, ISBN 9781999776862).[45]
Short stories
edit- Ballad for the New World (Heinemann Caribbean Writers Series, 1994, ISBN 978-0435989392) – includes the story "The House of Funerals" (Tom-Gallon Trust Award, 1986).
- Leaving by Plane Swimming Back Underwater (Papilotte Press, 2015; ISBN 9780957118782)
Non-fiction
edit- Golconda: Our Voices Our Lives (UTT Press, 2009), editor.
Poetry
edit- Looking for Cazabon, (Papilotte Press, 2024; ISBN 978-1739130367).
Further reading
edit- Aiyejina, Funso, 2003. "Self Portrait – Lawrence Scott novelist, short story writer and poet in conversation with Funso Aiyejina" (interview conducted 16 August 1998, Maraval, Port-of Spain), Trinidad and Tobago Review 20, no. 12, December 1998, pp. 10–11, 14–16, 19.
- Ferguson, James. 2000. "The Worlds of Lawrence Scott – beatprofile", Caribbean Beat, No. 43 May/June 2000, pp. 48–52.
- Maes-Jelinek, Hena, "Lawrence Scott's Caribbeanness: A personal reading of Witchbroom and Aelred's Sin", The Literary Criterion 35, 2000.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Lawrence Scott, "Region, Location and Aesthetics: An Interview", in Michael Niblett and Kerstin Oloff (eds), Perspectives on the 'other America': Comparative Approaches to Caribbean and Latin American Culture, Editions Rodopi, 2009, pp. 257–70.
- ^ 2000 Longlist Archived 5 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine, International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.
- ^ 2006 Longlist Archived 21 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine, International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.
- ^ The Nominees Archived 5 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine, International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award 2014.
- ^ Tindal Street Press author page. Archived 5 May 2013 at archive.today
- ^ Gemma Bowes, "Writer Lawrence Scott on Trinidad: carnival, calypso and ecotourism", The Guardian (London), 24 April 2015.
- ^ Stewart Brown, "The Worlds of Lawrence Scott", The Caribbean Voice. Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine profile of Lawrence Scott.
- ^ Lawrence Scott, "The Visit", "These Immigrants: Writers tell stories of their own migrations", Commonwealth Writers, 8 December 2014.
- ^ a b Biography, Lawrence Scott website.
- ^ "Matura Days – A Memoir", Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal, Vol. 4, Issue 2, Fall 2006.
- ^ Scott, Lawrence, "Derek Walcott: An Interview" Archived 20 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine, from English & Media Magazine, 1993.
- ^ Marina Salandy-Brown, "Golconda's living history", Newsday (Trinidad and Tobago), 5 November 2009.
- ^ Samantha Noel, "Scott reflects on Cazabon connection", Trinidad Guardian, 27 June 2007.
- ^ Hannum, Kristen (February 2013), "Light Falling on Bamboo" (review), HNR issue 63, Historical Novel Society.
- ^ "Lawrence Scott", The Royal Society of Literature.
- ^ Katie Mansfield, "RSL celebrates Levy as Baddiel, Beard and Fry made Fellows", The Bookseller, 25 June 2019.
- ^ a b Kim Robinson-Walcott, "Scott, Lawrence", in Eugene Benson and L. W. Conolly (eds), Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English, Routledge, 2nd edn 2005, p. 1414.
- ^ James Ferguson (May–June 2000). "The worlds of Lawrence Scott". Caribbean Beat. No. 43. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
- ^ Georgia de Chamberet (15 May 2017). "Lawrence Scott Author Interview". BookBlast. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
- ^ Jenny Green (2014). Somewhere Round the Corner. Twelve Acre Publishing. ISBN 978-0955590214.
- ^ "A Book at Bedtime: Witchbroom", Radio Times, Issue 3624, 17 June 1993, p. 125.
- ^ Witchbroom at Amazon.
- ^ "Witchbroom’s magic rises again", Trinidad and Tobago Guardian, 27 March 2017.
- ^ Debbie Jacob, https://archives.newsday.co.tt/2017/04/03/where-sexuality-does-not-matter/], Newsday, 3 April 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
- ^ Georgia De Chamberet (15 May 2017). "Review |Witchbroom, Lawrence Scott | Book of the Week". BookBlast.
- ^ "Ballad for the New World and Other Stories" (review), Publishers' Weekly, 10 March 1994.
- ^ "Aelred's Sin", Lawrence Scott website.
- ^ Mike Phillips, "Island at war", The Guardian, 8 May 2004.
- ^ "Night Calypso/Calypso de Nuit", Lawrence Scott website.
- ^ Verdel Bishop, "Lawrence Scott...Fills in the blanks with 'Light Falling on Bamboo'", Trinidad Express Newspapers, 23 November 2012.
- ^ Monique Roffey, "Light Falling on Bamboo, By Lawrence Scott – A novel of 19th-century Trinidad captures the drama of division in a post-slavery society", The Independent, 8 September 2012.
- ^ David Evans, "Quiet subversion", Financial Times, 5 October 2012.
- ^ Selwyn Cudjoe, "Michel-Jean Cazabon: The Making Of A West Indian Artist" Archived 15 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Trinidad Sunday Express, 11 January 2013.
- ^ Leaving by Plane, Swimming Back Underwater, Papilotte Press.
- ^ Alexander Lucie-Smith, "The paradise island drenched in pre-Vatican II Catholicism", Catholic Herald, 13 February 2015.
- ^ Chandler, Mark (1 November 2019). "Papillote picks up 'radical' novel from Caribbean writer Scott". The Bookseller.
- ^ Northfield, Ann (May 2020). "Dangerous Freedom". HNR (92). Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
- ^ "Dangerous Freedom". Papillote Press. 12 March 2021.
- ^ Dominique Lancastre (3 July 2021). "[Book Review] Dangerous Freedom by Lawrence Scott". Pluto Magazine. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
- ^ "Preface". Looking for Cazabon (PDF). 2024.
- ^ "The UWI Honorary degree recipients for 2023 announced". The University of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica.
- ^ "Lawrence Scott- UWI St. Augustine Honorary Graduate (Doctor of Letters [DLitt])". 3 November 2023 – via YouTube.
- ^ Lawrence Scott, TV and radio.
- ^ Njelle W. Hamilton, "On Memory and the Archives of Caribbean History — A Conversation with Lawrence Scott", Wasafiri, 2017.
- ^ Pires, BC (11 April 2021). "Dangerous Freedom: Lawrence Scott journeys into Elizabeth d'Aviniere's world in age of emancipation". Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.
External links
edit- Lawrence Scott's website.
- Press release, University of the West Indies.
- Stewart Brown, "The Worlds of Lawrence Scott", The Caribbean Voice profile.
- Andrew Johnson, "NAME IN THE FRAME: Mysterious Caribbean artist who inspired Lawrence Scott's novel", Camden New Journal, 8 November 2012.
- "Lawrence Scott reads at Paper Based book store Normandie Hotel, Trinidad", YouTube video.
- Gemma Bowes, "Writer Lawrence Scott on Trinidad: carnival, calypso and ecotourism", The Guardian, 24 April 2015.
- Njelle W. Hamilton, "On Memory and the Archives of Caribbean History — A Conversation with Lawrence Scott", Wasafiri, 2017.