Mark McWatt

Mark McWatt (born 29 September 1947)[1] is a Guyanese writer and educator.

Biography

Born in Georgetown, Guyana, McWatt studied at the University of Toronto (1966–70) and at Leeds University, where he completed a Ph.D. in 1975.[1] He subsequently headed the English Department at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill campus, Barbados.

McWatt has published three collections of poetry, the second of which, The Language of Eldorado (1994), was awarded the Guyana Prize. His first work of fiction, Suspended Sentences (2005), was the winner of a Commonwealth Writers' Prize in 2006, as well as the Casa de las Américas Prize for best book of Caribbean Literature in English or Creole.[2]

His poetry has been much published in little magazines and he has contributed widely to journals on aspects of Caribbean literature. He was founding editor, in 1986, of the Journal of West Indian Literature.[1] He is co-editor (with Stewart Brown) of the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse (2005)[3] and with Lucy Evans and Emma Smith of The Caribbean Short Story: Critical Perspectives (2011).

Bibliography

Poetry

Fiction

As editor

References

External links


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