
The Caribbean Writer has announced the prize winners for its Volume 33 edition.ย Winners in the various categories are:
The Daily News Prize to an author of fiction or an essay who is from the British Virgin Islands or the U.S. Virgin Islands goes to Winston โBobbyโ Nugent for his essay โThe Rim.โ Nugent was born in Spanish Town, Jamaica, and grew up on St. Croix. He is a writer with the U.S. Virgin Islands Legislature.
The Canute A. Brodhurst Prize for best short fiction goes to Cyril Dabydeen for โHow Far Do We Go?โ Dabydeenโs recent books include โMy Undiscovered Countryโ (Mosaic Press); โGodโs Spiderโ/poetry (Peepal Tree Press, UK); โMy Multi-Ethnic Friends and Other Storiesโ (Guernica Editions, Toronto). Previous books include: โJogging in Havanaโ (1992); โBlack Jesus and Other Storiesโ (1996); โBerbice Crossingโ (1997); โMy Brahmin Daysโ (2000); โNorth of theย Equatorโ (2001); โPlay a Song Somebody: New and Selected Short Storiesโ (2003); โImaginary Origins: New and Selected Poemsโ (2005); and the novel โDrums of My Fleshโ ( 2007). He has published in over 60 literary magazines and anthologies.
The Marvin E. Williams Literary Prize for a new or emerging writer goes to Sylene Joseph for her poem, โForce Ripe.โ Joseph is a West Indian poet, born and raised on Antigua, with ties to Dominica. She relocated to the U.S. Virgin Islands in her late teens and later studied in Trinidad for four years. Joseph has a poetry blog โFrom SylJoe with Loveโ and is currently working on several poetry manuscripts.
The Cecile de Jongh Literary Prize to a Caribbean author whose work best expresses the spirit of the Caribbean goes to Portia Subran for her short story, โTwice the World.โ Subran is a Trinidadian artist and writer. In 2013, she won the Potbake Productionsโ 2011-2013 Caribbean Short Story Competition with her work โUnclipped Wings,โ published in the short story anthology โJewels of the Caribbean.โย Her short story, โA New Life in a New Time,โ was published in the 2016 speculative anthology โNew Worlds, Old Ways: Speculative Tales from the Caribbean.โ She won the Small Axe Short Story Competition in 2016 for her piece โMango Feast,โ published in Small Axe Volume 53. Her entry, โThey Sleep in the Swamp,โ was long listed for the 2019 Johnson and Amoy Achong Caribbean Writerโs Prize (JAACWP) for prose fiction.
The Vincent Cooper Literary Prize to a Caribbean author for exemplary writing in Caribbean Nation Language (Kamau Brathwaite) goes to Isabelle Baafi for her poem โBlouse and Skirt.โ Baafi is a British writer and filmmaker of South African descent. Her work has been published in Allegro, Moko Magazine, Litro, Kalahari Review and elsewhere. She is currently working on her debut poetry collection.
The Boyce Literary Prize to an author whose work best expresses the changing social dynamics of the Caribbean goes to Kerlyne Hilaire for โZilde.โ Hilaire is a Haitian-American writer, mother and advocate for self-love. She has a Masters in Professional Writing from New York University, and a Bachelorโs in English Literature from the University of Central Florida. She is CEO of Lit Nest LLC and founder of Nesta Publishing House โ an organization dedicated to the publishing of rebellious art. Her published works can be found in the Caribbean American Passport and VIBE Magazine.
The Caribbean Writer appreciates the tremendous support of its prize sponsors. It is evident that their generosity is carving new inroads and casting new futures in literacy and literature within the Virgin Islands, the broader Caribbean and regions beyond.
For more information on The Caribbean Writer, visit www.thecaribbeanwriter.org







