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Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Guyanese writer returns 60 years later, restores a lost childhood with memoir

by

IRA MATHUR
409 days ago
20240526

IRA MATH­UR

 

“Writ­ing”, says Mag­gie Har­ris, a two-time win­ner of the Guyana Writ­ing Prize, is “as es­sen­tial to her as breath­ing.” Har­ris re­calls her child­hood in Guyana with a lyri­cism that echoes in her mem­oir “Kiskadee Girl,” re­cent­ly re-re­leased by Cane Ar­row Press to com­mem­o­rate her 70th birth­day. 

 “I’m talk­ing more than 60 years ago here, and that long stretch of time I still can’t be­lieve. It’s gone like a shot from an in­quis­i­tive child liv­ing in a time when there was no TV, no video games, noth­ing of that sort, liv­ing in a strict so­ci­ety where you had to beg to go out, girl­friends sweet-talk­ing your mom.”

Books were Har­ris’s “gate­way to the world,” and she de­voured every­thing from cow­boy comics to True Love sto­ries. “Read­ing and writ­ing went hand in hand; like many oth­ers, I al­so had pen-friends world­wide. I start­ed writ­ing love songs, which be­came po­ems.”

 Har­ris’s mem­oir of her child­hood re­calls a time when life was a prelap­sar­i­an dream. 

“My moth­er’s sto­ry­telling, as she sat in the rock­ing chair re­lay­ing fam­i­ly sto­ries rich with tragedies and fol­ly, turned on a light bright enough to out­shine the street lamps. Boat rides to Kwak­wani, where my dad cap­tained the baux­ite tugs, added an­oth­er lay­er—the whis­per of the rain­for­est, as did the si­lence of the bush be­hind my grand­moth­er’s house.”

 As a young woman, Har­ris as­pired to be a fash­ion de­sign­er. In­stead, she found her­self drawn to writ­ing to nav­i­gate the com­plex­i­ties of life and his­to­ry, par­tic­u­lar­ly af­ter mi­grat­ing to the UK in 1971 and be­com­ing a moth­er. 

 It’s been 60 years since those for­ma­tive years, and Har­ris’s pas­sion for the coun­try of her birth and writ­ing has not di­min­ished. The Guyana-born au­thor wrote 11 books of po­et­ry and prose, won the Wales Po­et­ry Award, and was the Re­gion­al Caribbean win­ner of the Com­mon­wealth Short Sto­ry Award. Up­on turn­ing 70, Har­ris re­flect­ed on her life’s jour­ney, which was marked by a re­cent “sur­re­al” trip home to Guyana, where she found al­most every­one she knew had “gone” and the Guyana she knew had changed. But writ­ing has kept that world in­tact, and “Kiskadee Girl” is a tes­ta­ment to those times, en­cap­su­lat­ing the vi­brant and tu­mul­tuous ex­pe­ri­ences that shaped her.

The fol­low­ing is an ex­tract from Har­ris’s mem­oir, Kiskadee Girl (Cane Ar­row Press) with all per­mis­sions grant­ed. 

Wheel­ing

“We’re cy­cling. From St John St to Wa­ter St. Our bikes are stal­lions, flags, bea­cons. Moul­tons, Chop­pers, Raleighs. They told the world you’d passed your ex­am. That one bring­ing up the rear with its mud­guard clank­ing spoke vol­umes. We rolled, like scores of oth­er teenagers for whom the bi­cy­cle was a cruis­ing ma­chine, a step up from Shank’s pony, past fam­i­lies strolling round town late af­ter­noon tak­ing part in the ac­tiv­i­ty of win­dow shop­ping. Past Bar­clay Banks, Wre­fords, the new Faaz cin­e­ma, D M Fer­nan­des, New Am­s­ter­dam mar­ket, Ba­ta shoe store. These are the days when shops have coun­ters with stern-look­ing as­sis­tants stand­ing be­hind them ask­ing what you want. There is no wan­der­ing up and down aisles. In Wre­ford’s the shop-girl takes your mon­ey and places it in a sil­ver pot that zips crazi­ly across the ceil­ing on a wire to the of­fice up­stairs. Zing! And change and re­ceipt come spin­ning back. So you dream hard­er and longer about the things you want, press your nose to the glass at J P San­tos where Lordy! A bat­tery-op­er­at­ed Mon­kee mo­bile is parked, pink as can­dyfloss, the heads of Davy, Micky, Mike, and Pe­ter pro­trud­ing from fake leather seats. Roll on past the Pen­guin Ho­tel, Bac­chus Pho­tog­ra­phy Stu­dio, Book­ers Stores. Legs slow to al­low gear changes, stretch to stand on the ped­als, pause to free­wheel. Arms let go of han­dle­bars: watch this, man!

Wear­ing a cre­ative col­lage of what was fash­ion­able, what was al­lowed, and what was af­ford­able–El­ly with her shirt­dress and chain belt, thick black pony­tail, not al­lowed to wear a miniskirt; De­vi not al­lowed to ex­pose her midriff, ty­ing the ends of her shirt bar­ing her brown body to the sun; me, ham­pered by the thinnest legs New Am­s­ter­dam had ever seen, di­vert­ing at­ten­tion from them with hal­ter-tops and hip­pie bead neck­laces; Glo­ry, be­ing Amer­i­can, the freest of us all, in short shorts ... but what could you ex­pect from some­one who un­dress­es bold as brass in full view of every­one out­side the dress­ing room pool­side at Blair­mont Es­tate whilst we fum­ble un­der tow­els, be­hind closed doors?

 Pass the Globe Cin­e­ma where on a Sat­ur­day af­ter­noon In­di­ans from the rur­al Coren­tyne file in to see movies from their moth­er coun­try, dressed to the nines in shal­wars and saris, home­made dress­es, gold ban­gles and sil­ver san­dals; the men not to be out­done, in bright shirts, seamed trousers, gold teeth, rings and glit­ter­ing watch­es. These are the chil­dren of In­den­ture, fam­i­lies hail­ing from Madras and La­hore, Cal­cut­ta and Del­hi whose cul­tures would come to de­vel­op and en­rich our so­ci­ety. From a wide di­ver­si­ty of castes from agrar­i­an to pot­tery, their jour­ney to British Guiana to work on the plan­ta­tions in the 19th C, would see the emer­gence of jew­ellers, shop­keep­ers, ac­coun­tants and lawyers. But the movies take them back to an an­ces­tral past where the In­di­an land­scape was as much a star as La­ta Mangeshkar and Sham­mi Kapoor: lovers chased each oth­er through pad­dy fields and rivers, peered at each oth­er through the cracks of tem­ples to a mu­si­cal sound­track that re­ver­ber­at­ed through the walls of the cin­e­ma and echoed along the wood­en stelling and over the banks of the riv­er. In the far fu­ture to come, when at last I would get the op­por­tu­ni­ty to vis­it Moth­er In­dia, the streets of Man­ga­lore would zoom me right back to Guyana, and these movies. When the doors opened, the au­di­ence stum­bled out in­to the sun­light on Wa­ter St, the sound­track still play­ing in their heads, their sens­es shocked by the light and the strange­ness of this re­al­i­ty.

 My girl­friends and I nev­er run out of things to say, the free­dom to lime was al­ways fought-for and re­strict­ed by time. We talk of school and boys, of par­ents who were bad-mind­ed and un­fair, of our de­vel­op­ing bod­ies and pe­ri­ods which we nick­named ‘Un­cle Hen­ry’ af­ter the doc­tor fa­ther of one of our friends. We sing out in Guyanese pa­tois, dis­cour­aged by par­ents and teach­ers who con­stant­ly re-it­er­at­ed the need for speak­ing prop­er Eng­lish, which no, does not in­clude Amer­i­can­ised slang. We laugh at the old man ‘with he goady hang­ing ova he bi­cy­cle seat’, at the ‘Eng­lish duck’ just come back from abroad with quack-quack in her voice, at ‘limeys’ eat­ing roti with a knife and fork. We find these things hi­lar­i­ous and many of us would get a cuff from el­ders who caught us sti­fling laugh­ter be­hind our cupped hands as guests looked at us askance.

 We cruise past the sweet drink fac­to­ry, jud­der over the wood­en slats of the stelling, be­neath which crabs danced the bossa-no­va and bathed their sil­very chil­dren when the tide came in. Co­ca-Co­la tops, diesel oil, cig­a­rette pack­ets, eels, worms and shrimps whirl and waltz as the riv­er froths against the green­heart posts. Sun­light cuts the wa­ter sharp as a cut­lass as we lean on our bikes, wish­ing we had the ex­trav­a­gance of sun­shades. The fer­ry docks, the cir­cu­lar steel floor on the car-deck re­volves, ve­hi­cles nose out on­to the ramps, car horns blow. Foot pas­sen­gers, too im­pa­tient to wait for the doors to open on the pas­sen­ger deck, clat­ter down the stairs, push their way through the queue of cars and bus­es. Mo­tor­bikes with lean hun­gry boys sport­ing sun­shades scream Yama­ha and Suzu­ki souls out in­to the af­ter­noon, weav­ing snake­like and fear­less to­wards Wa­ter St. In their wake, the coun­try bus­es with names such as Delilah and In God We Trust head­ed for the Coren­tyne, weighed down with rooftop pro­duce, live poul­try and man­goes, and boys rid­ing tan­dem.

 Es­caped logs from Fazal’s sawmill spin past in the wake of the Torani. Mis­tress Berbice bears them like boun­ty, gifts of ap­pease­ment, as she car­ries camood­ies and crabs, baux­ite and bones.”

 –End of ex­tract

 

Mag­gie Har­ris’s po­et­ry has been fea­tured as a pub­lic art in­stal­la­tion in Can­ter­bury, UK. Har­ris fre­quent­ly per­forms her work in­ter­na­tion­al­ly.

 Ira Math­ur is a Guardian Me­dia jour­nal­ist and the win­ner of the 2023 NGC Bo­cas Prize for Non-Fic­tion for her mem­oir, Love The Dark Days.

Web­site: www.iras­room.org

Au­thor in­quiries can be sent to iras­room@gmail.com 


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