VIDEO: CALABASH - So Much Things To Say

The 10th anniversary of Calabash

 
[April 10, 2010 — Kingston, Jamaica] Jamaica’s Calabash International Literary Festival will celebrate its 10thanniversary with a joyfest of readings, live music, cinema and inventive conversation at Jake’s in Treasure Beach from Friday, May 28 to Sunday, May 30. All events will be free and open to the public. Passion will be the only price of entry.
 
The list of writers includes Nobel Prize Winner Wole Soyinka (Nigeria), Geoff Dyer (UK), Colson Whitehead (USA), Nami Mun (South Korea), Sharon Olds (USA), Sudeep Sen (India), Feryal Ali Guaher (Pakistan), Helen Oyeyemi (Nigeria) and Russell Banks (USA). Roots rock reggae superstar Freddie McGregor and will headline a late night concert that will also feature Jamaica’s most beloved young singer/songwriter, the beautiful Etana.
 

Commemorative Book

Calabash 2010 will also mark the release of the anthology So Much Things to Say, a collection of work by 100 poets who have appeared at the festival. 

 

Edited by Kwame Dawes and Colin Channer, and published by Akashic Books in New York, the beautiful but affordable soft cover edition with elegant French flaps is a global bazaar of styles, ideas and voices—Li Young Lee, Derek Walcott, Elizabeth Alexander, Martin Espada, Michael Ondaatje, Natasha Trethewey, Robert Pinsky, Mutabaruka, Suheir Hamad and more. All profits from the sale of the book will be donated to the festival.

 
“Calabash knows how to put on a splash,” says Colin Channer, the festival’s artistic director since its founding in 2001. “We take literature seriously but we also take fun seriously. We’re an international festival that lives in harmony with its local community of fishermen and farmers. We’re grown up now at ten, I guess, but we’ll always be young a heart, always Calabash … earthy, inspirational, daring and diverse.”
 
Opening night at Calabash 2010 will feature a rare screening of the late Jamaican director Trevor Rhone’s 1976 comedy classic Smile Orange, the story or a roguish waiter at a beachside hotel.  Rhone was co-writer of Perry Henzell’s The Harder They Come.  The festival will close with an acoustic exploration of the lyrics of Bob Marley’s final studio album Uprising, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year.

 

Calabash 2010 is a production of the Calabash International Literary Festival Trust, a registered non-profit organization under the laws of Jamaica and New York State.