The Village of One

$35.00

Essays on Trinbago’s Past, Places, People

Charan invites you to just read for the story, for the storytelling, and for the language. And if Richard did his job well enough, you may discover what Trinbagonians lost.

By: Richard Charan

SKU: 315 Category:

Description

In The Village of One, journalist Richard Charan merges history, investigative journalism, and the art of storytelling
in recrafting unusual news stories originally written and published in The Trinidad Express newspaper, into a
fascinating book that will surprise and delight readers. At first glance, the stories may appear random and
directionless but read collectively and deeply, the reader soon comes to realise the writer’s achievement in giving
the faceless and forgotten a voice, as he explores the human condition as Trinbagonians come to confront who
they are and what they have lost.

Unlike a traditional history text, the stories that make up The Village of One are not chronological accounts of
important dates, famous people, memorable events, or distant places, but as Sunity Maharaj highlights in her
Foreword, ‘the ordinary and overlooked are magical apertures leading from Trinidad and Tobago’s present into its
fascinating past … where history is familiar, alive and within easy reach.’
Some of the stories will be familiar to readers of The Trinidad Express when they originally appeared as ‘news’ but
Charan has, in Maharaj’s words, stretched the boundaries of news to transform them into non-fiction essays in
which he offers readers a completely different thrill in the random encounters of a series of unforgettable people in
forgotten places.

Charan invites you to just read for the story, for the storytelling, and for the language. And if Richard did his job
well enough, you may discover what Trinbagonians lost.

Additional information

Weight 3 lbs
Dimensions 10 × 8 in
ISBN

9789768339218

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

284

About The Author

Richard Charan is multimedia editor /writer with The Trinidad Express newspaper.

Contents

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgements
GHOST VILLAGES
 The Village of One
 The Last Rum Shop Keeper
 Mother Corn Hocks and the Cutlass
 Finding the Pirate of Paramin
 The Lost Settlement of TCO
 The Highway Lie
 The Wild Horses of Savana Grande
 Dare the Devil
 The Halfway House
 The Unmarked Graves of Basta Hall
 The Tombstone on Dragon Hill
STREAMS INTO RIVERS INTO OCEANS
 When the Ortoire River Glows
 Chip Chip Road
 A Message from the Sea
 The Mountain Road to Maracas
 The Marac Mystery
 A House in the Sea
IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK
 The Man who Fell from the Sky
 Gopal’s Gift
 The Lady in the Attic
 Loving Leela
 The Mystery at Iere Village
 Too Late for this Old Man
 An Artist in Boscoe’s House
 The Indian Mansion Builder
 The Post Mistresses of Tortuga
 Mr Koyo’s Castle
THE TREASURES OF TOBAGO
 The Beautiful Builder
 A Graveyard in the Sea
 The Little House at Black Rock
 Les Coteaux’s Secret
 The Cliff Burials at Moriah

EVERY LINE OF THE RAILWAY
 The Epic Life of Monteith Saunders
 Love on the Line
 Engine Man Eddie
 Mr Lalchan and the Railway
 Defending the Bridges
 Time for the Railway
 Bearded Mr Brown
BLACK GOLD DISASTERS
 The Christmas Cataclysm of 1928
 The Spill that Threatened Tobago
 The Berth Tragedy of 1985
THE FIRST CITIZENS
 The Last Caveman
 What Lies Beneath
 Mr Arjoon’s 2,000-Year-Old Secret
 Hamlet and the Banwari Find
 What Dogface Discovered
 The Exorcist
EXTRAORDINARY PEOPLE
 The Stowaways
 Solomon Hochoy and the Village
 Man on the Mountain
 Three Sitting Pundits
 The Hilltop Hermit
 Finding Love on the Wharf
 Miss Elaine of Grande Riviere
 Uncle Boy, the Sculptor
 For the Love of Annie
 The Headmaster
 The Closing Chapters
 Blue-Eyed Betty of Moruga
 Man vs Sea
 The Sign Painter
 The Legendary Jogie
 The Vow
Glossary
Bibliography
Index

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