Last year, as some of you may remember, was my Year of Down Under, in which I attempted (and failed, but no matter...) to read one Australian book per month.  I didn't get through all the works I wanted to (no Peter Carey, no Tim Winton!), but it still proved to be a really fascinating way to read, bringing out all sorts of interesting ways of thinking about nation and national traditions or fascinations.
So what will this year's theme be?  Well, I had felt the pull of a non-English-language theme, one that would require much more reading in translation.  China and Japan loomed large in these musings.  But I am contemplating teaching courses in Anglophone literature more and more frequently these days, so I decided to go for a different sort of a regional focus: the Caribbean.
Below are some authors I would love to read for the first time or read more of in the next twelve months (I have also noted specific works by these authors that I own or that particularly interest me):
- Julia Alvarez (Dominican Republic)
 - In the Time of the Butterflies
 - Reinaldo Arenas (Cuba)
 - Before Night Falls
 - Edwidge Danticat (Haiti)
 - Krik? Krak!
 - Jamaica Kincaid (Antigua)
 - My Brother
 - Patrick Chamoiseau (Martinique)
 - Texaco
 - Paule Marshall (Barbados)
 - The Chosen Place, The Timeless People
 - V.S. Naipaul (Trinidad)
 - A Bend in the River
 - Jean Rhys (Dominica)
 - Quartet
 - Caryl Phillips (St. Kitts)
 - Crossing the River
 - A Distant Shore
 - Derek Walcott (Saint Lucia/Trinidad)
 - Omeros
 - Aime Cesaire (Martinique)
 - The Tempest
 - Andrea Levy (Jamaica)
 - Small Island
 - David Dabydeen (Guyana)
 - A Harlot's Progress
 
Does anyone have any suggestions? I would be particularly interested in suggestions of good general histories about the Caribbean.


My favorite Caribbean-related lit of late is Tobias Buckell's Caribbean-flavored SF---Crystal Rain and Ragamuffin. Awesome books, although not quite what you're looking for. :)
Sounds intriguing! I will have to look into Buckell....
Wide Sargasso Sea is a wonderful novel. Feminist literature at its best to be sure (none of the hair pulling steryoltyoes). You have Rhys on your list already but I did not see that title.
Also, You MUST read Peter Carey. I started off reading him with WRONG ABOUT JAPAN - his only work of non-fiction (travel literature).
If you do decide sometime to have Japan as your theme give me a ring. I got a degree in that and can point you to some awesome reads.
Thanks for that list though. Makes me realize how underdeveloped I am in that area.