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Writer Kaie Kellough talks about displacement

On Feb. 23, the 2020-21 Canadian Writers in Person Lecture Series presented Black Canadian writer and sound performer Kaie Kellough, reading from his book, Dominoes at the Crossroads. 91亚色 Teaching Assistant Dana Patrascu-Kingsley sent the following report to YFile.

Acclaimed Black Canadian writer and sound performer Kaie Kellough visited the Canadian Writers in Person series at 91亚色 on Feb. 23 to talk about his collection of short stories,聽Dominoes at the Crossroads,聽winner of the 2020 the QWF Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction.Canadian Writers in Person featured Kaie Kellough's "Dominoes at the Crossroads"

Dominoes at the Crossroads maps an alternate Canada 鈥 one crisscrossed by a Caribbean diaspora seeking music, futures, and portals to their past. 鈥淥ne of the things I wanted to do in the book is: if a story was set in one place, it might be told from another. I always wanted a kind of displacement at the heart of the work,鈥 said Kellough.

When he was writing this book, Kellough said he was also working on a book of poetry, and he found that the two types of writing spoke to each other: they had similar themes, and some similar stylistic characteristics turned up in the poetry and in the fiction. 鈥淚nitially I had wanted to keep these two things separate,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut what I realized afterwards is that it鈥檚 important to let these different types of writing and artistic pursuits converse with and inform one another.

鈥淭he way a lyric poem moves and turns permeated the stories and gave them their sense of movement and flow,鈥 explained Kellough. 鈥淭he stories in this collection don鈥檛 follow the structures of fiction. They move in their meandering ways. They鈥檙e short stories, but they have the movement of poems.鈥

The collection includes jazz musicians, hitchhikers, quiet suburbanites, student radicals, secret agents, historians, and their fugitive slave ancestors, navigating the streets of Old Montreal, small Canadian towns and Caribbean locations. Dominoes at the Crossroads 鈥減lays double-dutch with time and latitude as its characters skip between their Caribbean roots and their Canadian present.鈥 Kellough elaborated on this image: 鈥淔or me double-dutch is that sense of having your foot in two worlds, having a foot in this moment and a foot in a past moment.鈥

The intersections in Dominoes at the Crossroads of prose and poetry, of different timelines and of various geographical locations make it a truly innovative and fascinating book.

The Canadian Writers in Person series will continue on March 9 with a reading and Q-and-A session with Terry Watada on Mysterious Dreams of the Dead.

Readings are free and open to any member of the public. For more information, contact Professor聽Gail Vanstone听补迟听gailv@yorku.ca. All readings are held Tuesdays from 7 to 8.30 p.m. on Zoom.