Curfew Chronicles
by Jennifer Rahim.
In 2011, the Trinidad government declared a state of emergency and an overnight curfew. The SoE, brought in to combat the crime and killings associated with the drugs trade, was meant to last 15 days but lasted four months. This is the background to these chronicles, but not their substance. They are an imaginative response to the undertones of those days. Taking place over 24 hours, Curfew Chronicles brings together, like a Joyce’s Ulysses in miniature, the lives of two dozen characters (including a father and son searching for each other) whose lives intersect in mostly fortuitous but sometimes quite deliberate ways.
From the Minister and his wife, to those targeted by the state; from those in regular jobs, to those who scuffle for a living on or over the edge of the law; from those who speak out, to the hidden hands prepared to silence them: no one is unaffected by the SoE. What makes these stories individually rich (as well as collectively ingenious) is the depth of characterisation. There is Scholar the street-corner prophet, Ragga with his vision of better days, Keeper tempted into crime to the distress of his redoubtable partner Maureen, Sumintra, the Pentecostal convert struck dumb in prayer, Marcus the assassin whose life is a movie, Amber the security guard and poet and her policeman lover Calvin, eager to retire from clearing up little matters like the “weed” found in the PM’s residence, and many more. Each has a resonant backstory; each is caught at a moment of decision or revelation. As these characters criss-cross Trinidad, Rahim builds an unforgettable world of people in a vividly realised landscape.
Press
"Curfew Chronicles unsettles comfortable habits of thought regarding our state of existence, our beliefs about social order and the bases on which we can feel safe... A compelling and rewarding read." - Caribbean Quarterly
Rights Profile
Rights Available
World, all languages
Original Language
English
Samples Available
Full text available in English
Publication Date
August 2017
Link
Curfew Chronicles on the Peepal Tree website