Ever Since We Small Nottingham Book Launch
Nottingham Central Library hosts an evening with award-winning author Celeste Mohammed to celebrate her new novel Ever Since We Small.
Date and time
Location
Nottingham Central Library
1 Carrington Street Nottingham NG1 7FH United KingdomGood to know
Highlights
- 2 hours, 30 minutes
- In person
Refund Policy
About this event
“Celeste Mohammed's Ever Since We Small is an important and spell-binding odyssey of indenture and Mohammed tells it powerfully and beautifully through her evocative prose.”
– Priya Hein, author of Riambel
Nottingham welcomes Celeste Mohammed in conversation with a soon-to-be announced guest to celebrate Ever Since We Small, her second novel that delves into the legacy of indentureship and the layered Indo-Caribbean heritage that was born out of an under-discussed historic migration.
Hosted at Nottingham Central Library join us for a conversation that roots this spell-binding novel in a historic context that reshapes how we understand the Caribbean and its people.
Books will be sold by Five Leaves Bookshop with a book signing to follow the conversation and a chance to meet the Trinidad-based award-winning author in person.
Keep up with the rest of her tour here to see if she is coming to a city near you or a city of a friend who needs to be in the know!
Ever Since We Small Blurb
An intricately woven tapestry of stories where survival, resilience and self-discovery are passed down through generations of an Indo-Trinidadian family.
Celeste Mohammed's second novel-in-stories, Ever Since We Small, is a family saga which covers a sweeping landscape from the days of the British Raj in India, to multicultural modern Trinidad. Written in a blend of Standard English and several flavours of Trinidad kriol, the book follows the bloodline of a young woman, Jayanti, after her decision to become a girmitiya, an indentured labourer in the Caribbean.
Jayanti's grandson, Lall Gopaul, seeks to escape the rural village where he was born, but becomes seduced and corrupted by urban life. His son, Shiva, is forced to take a child-bride, Salma, but never recovers from the guilt. Heartache follows for their three children - Anand, Nadya and Abby - who must each find a way to accept and yet move past their parents' failed example.
Along the journey of these ten interconnected stories, the alchemy necessary to turn the Gopauls' inheritance of pain into a "generation of gold" requires intervention by the living and dead, the "real" and the mythical, the mundane and the magical, the secular and the sacred.
About Celeste Mohammed
Celeste has been a lawyer since 2001 but she has been telling stories all her life. A native of Trinidad and Tobago, in 2016, she graduated from Lesley University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, with an MFA in Creative Writing (Fiction). Celeste's goal is to dispel all myths about island-life and island-people, and to showcase the musicality and resonance of Trinidadian creole (kriol).
Her work has appeared in The New England Review, Litmag, Epiphany, The Rumpus, among other places. She is the recipient of a 2018 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers. She was also awarded the 2019 Virginia Woolf Award for Short Fiction, and the 2017 John D Gardner Memorial Prize for Fiction.