Shortlisted for the 2025 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature
Shortlisted for the 2025 RSL Christopher Bland Prize for debut works by authors aged over 50
She in hav no farda, she in hav no mudda. She in hav nobody … dey mudda in sending f’dem.
Losing faith in her mother, resenting Hesta, Wheeler felt alone in the world. She remembered Christmas shopping with her sisters, being in the backstreet bakery eating bakes-n-souse.
The Pages of the Sea is Anne Hawk's debut novel.
It is set in the first months of 1966 on an unnamed, but beautifully evoked, Caribbean island and centred around Wheeler, a young girl.
Just before Christmas 1965, Wheeler's mother had sailed on a Geest banana boat to the UK as part of the Windrush generation, leaving Wheeler and her two older, teenage sister Adele and Hesta behind. The three girls' father, an itinerant worker, had left the island some years early, when Wheeler was very small, looking for work in Aruba, and had ceased contact, so the girls are left in the care of their Aunt Innez, their mother's sister.
Indeed Innez's household, living in the home originally owned by Wheeler's maternal grandparents, now consists of eight in total - Innez, Celeste (another sister to Wheeler's mother), and Innez's three children (their father - or possibly more than one father - absent) Floyd, the oldest and who increasingly dominates the household, Jonathan and Donelle who is Wheeler's age. Another aunt/sister lives nearby, Geraldine, seemingly somewhat better off and, although married, childless.
This is a perfect novel for the press that published it, Weatherglass Books - see below - quietly powerful, truthful rather than overtly political. Indeed, I had to teach myself to read it - I struggled with the first 100 pages as I was waiting for some hidden drama to surface, rather than focusing on what Wheeler experiences, as a child, left without her parents, bewildered by the family politics and without a natural figure for her to turn to for clarification and comfort.
For example, the key animating action in the first third of the novel comes from a simple request from Celeste to Wheeler for the girl to go on her own on an errand to the breadshop down in the town, further than she has ever been on her own before: Y'tink y'can go down and get d'bread.. An ain let nobody see you?. When the town grapevine reports back to Innez that the young girl was seen alone on an errand in the town, it seems to cause a minor family disagreement but one which, for Wheeler, looms as a major issue. And as the novel progresses she, and the reader, gradually understands some - but only some - of the family dynamics, none of which take the forms of particularly dramatic revelations, but which have implications for Wheeler's lived experience.
Having not troubled her before, time these days seemed all the while to be shoving Wheeler around.
And while their mother has said she will send for them, Wheeler naively assumes this means any day now, watching anxiously as boats arrive and leave the harbour wondering if each is coming for her, rather than the years it it likely to take for her mother to become sufficiently secure and established in the UK. The story forms the other side of the rather better-explored implications of the generation who emigrated to the UK.
Recommended and a novel that I hope the Women's Prize judges will recognise.
Weatherglass Books
Weatherglass Books is a new independent press founded by Neil Griffiths (novelist and founder of the Republic of Consciousness Prize for Small Presses) and Damian Lanigan (novelist and playwright).
Weatherglass was founded on a shared love of Penelope Fitzgerald’s The Blue Flower and a shared fear that it wouldn’t find a publisher today.
Weatherglass Books wants to clear a space for the next The Blue Flower.
“Running the Republic of Consciousness Prize I read hundreds of novels from small presses and loved a great many, but I did feel an absence of novels that were somehow exquisite at the simplest level: great story-telling built up from beautiful sentence-making.” Neil Griffiths, co-publisher
"We’re looking for intelligent, original, beautiful writing, and we're finding it. Additionally - maybe it's a reaction to the unhinged, fictional-seeming times we live in - we find writers trying to be truthful. It's a fascinating combination: writers who have extraordinary things to say, and are saying them with energy and style, whilst also trying to express something real and true about the world. It's bracing and exciting. It feels like the perfect time to start a literary press.” Damian Lanigan, co-publisher