Peepal Tree Salon at Waterstones Piccadilly

June 15, 2016

Peepal Tree Salon @ Waterstones Piccadilly

Yvonne Weekes (reading from Volcano),  Desiree Reynolds (reading from Seduce), Maya Chowdhry (reading from Fossil)

Yvonne Weekes believes that if you touch one soul, you change the world. If this is true, her impact has already been as forceful as the volcano she fled. As writer, actor, director, producer, performance poet, teacher facilitator, caring friend and mother, she has touched the souls of many and changed the lives of quite a few. Volcano is Yvonne Weekes’ memoir of eight years dominated by the awakening, eruption and still grumbling aftermath of Montserrat’s Soufriere. A remarkable document at many levels, it is an acutely written account of the impact of the eruption on the life and viability of this small Caribbean island, with a quizzical eye for the undertones of the experience, as well as for the more public manifestations of the way her people responded to the disaster.

 

Desiree Reynolds was brought up in Clapham, London and started her writing career as a freelance journalist for the Jamaica Gleaner and the Village Voice. She has gone on to write film scripts, poetry and short stories. She continues to work as a journalist, writing book and film reviews. She is a broadcaster, creative writing workshop facilitator, DJ and mentor. Seduce is her first novel. In this remarkable debut novel, told in a compelling literary patois that is poetic, delicate, vulgar and slyly funny, Desiree Reynolds has powerful things to say about race, class and the struggle between men and women. She is currently working on a collection of short stories.

 

A poet, transmedia writer and activist, Maya Chowdhry’s previous poetry collection is The Seamstress and the Global Garment. She’s also published in many anthologies, including Out of Bounds (Bloodaxe) and magazines such as Ambit. She’s won many accolades for her work, including the Cardiff International Poetry Competition.Tales from the Towpath, commissioned by Manchester Literature Festival, was shortlisted for the 2014 New Media Writing Prize. Her forthcoming chapbook Fossil explores the impact of human activity on climate change though a post-colonial lens and from the perspective of all life on earth including plants, creatures, elements and inanimate objects.

More Events in Greater London Listings MORE

Westminster Saturday 8 March – Saturday 14 June, 2025

Retrograde

★★★★★ ‘The finest new play about a pivotal moment in civil rights history’  The Telegraph   Following its…

Eddy Kamuanga Ilunga Portrait Photo copyright Jonathan Greet 2024
Camden until 25th January 2025

Eddy Kamuanga Ilunga: Nature Morte

October Gallery is thrilled to present Nature Morte, the latest solo exhibition by acclaimed Congolese artist Eddy Kamuanga…

Nnenna Okore, Hide, 2014. Ceramic and burlap, 216 x 280 x 31 cm. Courtesy October Gallery London
Camden 30th January – 1st March, 2025

Material Sensibilities

“It is easy to follow, but it is uninteresting to do easy things. We find out about ourselves…

Westminster Tuesday 11 March

Marisha Wallace

West End and Broadway sensation Marisha Wallace is returning to the Adelphi Theatre for her biggest ever headline show.   The musical…