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Bocas Lit Fest explores real-life stories - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Life writing – in books ranging from memoirs to family histories – is set to be a major focus at this year’s NGC Bocas Lit Fest, with readings and discussions featuring a fascinating line-up of Trinidad and Tobago authors.

A rapidly growing, popular genre with locally-based writers, life writing records real-life personal and community stories. A special programme of events at the annual festival – running from April 28-30 and based at the National Library in downtown Port of Spain – puts a diverse array of memoirists and biographers under the spotlight, a media release said.

The line-up includes the winner of this year’s OCM Bocas Prize for Non-Fiction. Ira Mathur, well known as a journalist, who will discuss her category-winning memoir, Love the Dark Days, alongside Brian Samuel, Grenadian author of Song for My Father, and Simone Dalton, Trinidad-born, North America-based winner of the 2020 RBC Taylor Emerging Writer Prize for non-fiction. The session starts at 11 am on April 30.

[caption id="attachment_1011593" align="alignnone" width="864"] Ira Mathur -[/caption]

Other writers, with backgrounds ranging from the airplane cockpit to the banking boardroom, have recently made their mark in life writing, and are eager to share their stories at the 2023 NGC Bocas Lit Fest. Wendy Yawching, the first woman captain of TT’s national airline, will present passages from her memoir The Courage to Fly in a panel also featuring retired managing director of Republic Bank Ronald Harford (Nil Illegitimi Carborundum) and professional life coach Angela Laquis-Sobrian (Breaking Free: A Journey from Trauma to Empowerment), at 4.30 pm on April 30.

Linking larger-than-life soca stardom to the NGC Bocas Lit Fest is Elizabeth “Lady” Montano, manager and biographer of her multiple award-winning son Machel Montano. In her book King of Soca, published to acclaim in 2022, “Lady” reflects on Machel’s supernova path to success. She is slated for a one-on-one session in conversation with veteran music producer and radio host Keron “Sheriff” Thompson, on April 29 at 2 pm.

[caption id="attachment_1011592" align="alignnone" width="684"] Elizabeth “Lady” Montano -[/caption]

A crucial aspect of life writing centres family histories: their legacy, history, and development through TT’s growth as a nation. Three beautifully produced non-fiction books of this nature will be highlighted at the festival. Cheryl Bowles, founder of Cher-Mère and representative of the Waldron family, will highlight the Waldrons’ achievements as documented in The Ladder We Ascend. Joining her is anthropologist Dylan Kerrigan, whose Growing Up Woodbrook, written with Ken Jaikaransingh, has already achieved bestseller status at independent Port of Spain bookseller Paper Based Bookshop. Rounding out this panel is Beverly Scobie, whose Via the Round About chronicles the achievements of the Scobie family from 1819 to the present day. They appear on April 30 at 3 pm.

[caption id="attachment_1011594" align="aligncent

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