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Raymond R. Ramcharitar is a Trinidadian poet, playwright, fiction writer, historian and media and cultural critic.
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Ramcharitar was educated at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine, where he earned three degrees: a Bachelor's in Economics (1991), a Master's in Literature in English (2002) and a Doctorate in Cultural History (2007). He was awarded a fellowship to Boston University's Creative Writing Program in 2000 by Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott, where he studied poetry and drama.
Ramcharitar's published works include academic and creative books and articles. His book The Island Quintet (fiction), a collection of novellas, was published by Peepal Tree Press, UK, 2009.[1] It was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book, 2010 for the Caribbean & Canada. The Island Quintet was reviewed in the Trinidad & Tobago Review. A reviewer for The Independent compared Ramcharitar's prose to that of Derek Walcott and V. S. Naipaul.[2]
American Fall, a collection of poems described as "confident and engaging",[3] was published by Peepal Tree in 2007.
He published a historical work, A History of Creole Trinidad, 1956-2010[4] A book of media criticism, Breaking the News, Media & Culture in Trinidad, was published by Lexicon, a Trinidadian publisher (2005).
Ramcharitar's play Paradiso was one of three winners of the Warehouse Theatre's 2002 International Playwriting Festival, and he was invited to the BBC in September 2003, on a radio drama fellowship.
His work as a poet is, unusually for contemporary Caribbean poets, highly formal and entirely in Standard English. He uses traditional forms such as the sonnet, villanelle and sestina. He is influenced by Walcott, Philip Larkin, R. S. Thomas and Wallace Stevens.
As a fiction writer, he has been compared to V. S. Naipaul, but his explicit sensuality and tendency to experimentation display debts to writers as diverse as Umberto Eco and Thomas Pynchon. The epigraph to The Island Quintet was from Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow.
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