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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Desirée Seebaran–Among the rising stars of writers & poets for 2023

by

Ira Mathur
709 days ago
20230611

IRA MATH­UR

De­sirée See­baran is a ris­ing star among T&T’s writ­ers and po­ets, one to watch in 2023. The po­et won the Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writ­ers Prize (po­et­ry) in 2019 and, while work­ing and rais­ing a young fam­i­ly, nabbed the huge­ly pres­ti­gious John­son & Amoy Achong Caribbean Writer’s Prize (2021-ad­min­is­tered by Ar­von and the NGC Bo­cas Lit Fest).

See­baran, who be­gan writ­ing sto­ries when she was a child, says she’s “com­pelled by words–both read­ing and writ­ing them,” and re­mem­bers “de­vour­ing” her fa­ther’s im­pres­sive col­lec­tion of Read­er’s Di­gests and read­ing To Kill A Mock­ing­bird (Harp­er Lee) and Minty Al­ley (CLR James) at nine. Fi­nal­ly, See­ber­an “fell in love with po­et­ry” at the Uni­ver­si­ty of The West In­dies, thanks to some “bril­liant pro­fes­sors.”

Of the im­pulse to write, See­baran says, “These post-colo­nial places are the bedrock of every­thing I write; I can’t leave T&T (or Guyana, my moth­er’s birth­place) be­hind even if I tried. Not even Naipaul could. But I’d be ly­ing if I said I was flour­ish­ing here. I’ve had much sup­port from The Bo­cas Lit Fest, but it’s hard to af­ford to be a writer un­less you’re be­ing sup­port­ed by some­one else’s wealth. That’s true for writ­ers every­where. Yet the com­pul­sion to write has nev­er left me, and I can’t imag­ine it ever will.”

Guardian Me­dia’s WE mag­a­zine re­pro­duces two of See­baran’s po­ems with per­mis­sion from the writer and pub­li­ca­tions where they first ap­peared. 

Pi­cong

You are 30 and too late: pi­cong blis­ters

the wrong side of your skin: black & ug­ly.

Like iron screwed to ship’s hull,

the tim­ber

twist­ing cold met­al in­to sin,

black & ug­ly.

Your face is a mask: eyes shut­tered,

cal­abash cheeks and dark skin—

black & ug­ly.

The cho­rus leaps to your lips like prayer,

a tor­rent of tongues that sing,

“Black & ug­ly.”

These words are spiky,

acid spells that slit the skin, black & ug­ly.

They burn like cot­ton wicks

in wax turned to sooty film, black & ug­ly.

Maybe the words hit your cheek, wet, fly­ing from

an­oth­er woman’s grin: Yuh black & ug­ly!

Some tantie may have held you, con­sol­ing­ly,

“Doh cry, sweet ting. You’ll just get more black & ug­ly.”

How these words tied you is triv­ial. What mat­ters are

their hooks, spread­ing black & ug­ly keloids

down your spine, forc­ing flesh to flower

to sur­vive: torn & swollen, black & ug­ly.

And rage is froth­ing gen­tly un­der lung

as you smooth your­self in­to black & ug­ly panties.

Paint your lips, De­sirée, see if that flo­ral per­fume

hides the bite of your skin, black & ug­ly.

You smile, speak, sim­mer. Then catch a glimpse

of your­self in some mir­rored sur­face—black & ug­ly ...

This po­em won the po­et­ry sec­tion of the 2019 Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writ­ers’ Prize.

Bone

I’ve nev­er touched a dead body.

But one night, Pearl left her grave

to find me,

scream­ing across the fence

that her lip­stick and wig were ugli­er

than death (they were),

and when had I ever seen her wear a dress

with no struc­ture?

When I woke up, the arm that I used to

wipe tears in my dream was stony

at the el­bow.

Ten­don and lig­a­ment turned cold.

And then I stopped view­ing corpses

for fear of what they would ac­cuse me of in my sleep.

For in­stance, my grand­moth­er,

de­spite her rigour at the time,

may have been an­noyed that my fa­ther

and his broth­ers de­clined

to wear white to her fu­ner­al.

She on­ly nagged them about it for 20 years.

Each glimpse of her dark skin and closed eyes

on satin caused my fin­gers’ fi­brous mus­cle to cal­ci­fy

Or my neigh­bour, who with­ered un­der

a blitzkrieg of tu­mours, may have had

words to say about hold­ing his wife’s hand

while dy­ing in bed.

He did not die alone

but if he saw any­thing be­yond his pain

he must have re­alised that she would

nev­er re­cov­er. At the church

I could not avoid the cof­fin:

the flow­ers at his chest brushed my hip

lock­ing it in­to an os­si­fied bruise,

like his wid­ow’s lips.

And my great-aunt may have

briefly ob­ject­ed to how long

her third stroke took to kill her.

I could be wrong - she was ac­quaint­ed with ric­tus

years be­fore I was born,

with her stiff­ened arm and leg

and calm con­ver­sa­tions with a man who

de­nied their child. She’s died,

but one pho­to, her wide mouth

that would make a wry joke,

this pho­to slipped in­to the pile,

and I felt my left eye be­come dense

heavy as salt. I make no ex­cep­tions now.

The dead be­gin a boil in me,

fin­gers clench­ing deep

and I fly awake,

forc­ing air in­to stiff­en­ing lungs.

Friends stopped ask­ing me to sit shi­va

be­cause my si­lence is not tra­di­tion­al.

You can’t speak when bone in­fests your tongue.

In­ter­view­ing the Caribbean–Spring 2019 is­sue.

De­sirée See­baran is an alum of the Crop­per Foun­da­tion Res­i­den­tial Work­shop for Writ­ers (2010) and the in­au­gur­al Moko Mag­a­zine Po­et­ry Mas­ter­class (2018). See­baran’s work was short­list­ed for the 2014 Small Axe lit­er­ary com­pe­ti­tion and Fron­tier Po­et­ry’s Award for New Po­ets Con­test 2017. The po­et’s work has been pub­lished in sev­er­al jour­nals, in­clud­ing Cordite Po­et­ry Re­view 81, Moko Mag­a­zine and In­ter­view­ing the Caribbean.

Ira Math­ur is a Guardian colum­nist and the win­ner of the non-fic­tion OCM Bo­cas Prize for Lit­er­a­ture 2023.


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