SHANI MOOTOO was born in Ireland and raised in Trinidad. Her poetry books include Oh Witness Dey!, Cane | Fire, and The Predicament of Or. She is the author of several novels, including Cereus Blooms at Night, now a Penguin Modern Classic and a Vintage Classics book, and Polar Vortex, both shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. Mootoo's novels have been long and shortlisted for the Booker Prize, the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the Dublin Literary Award, among others. Her prose and poetry have been widely anthologized, , including in Trinidad Noir, Trinidad Noir: The Classics, and The Haunted Tropics, and her poetry has appeared in Wasafiri, Poetry Magazine, Audemas, and Room Magazine, among other magazines and journals. She has been awarded the Doctor of Letters honoris causa degree from Western University and is a recipient of Lambda Literary's James Duggins Outstanding Mid-Career Novelist Prize and the Writers' Trust Engel Findley Award. She lives in Southern Ontario, Canada.
"""A formidable, bold, and expansive collection of poetry that highlights Shani Mootoo's aesthetic and intellectual prowess. Rich in luminous detail, Oh Witness Dey! is an unflinching exploration of colonial histories, one that opens up space for supple, nuanced insights."" --Linda Morra, Writer/Host, Getting Lit With Linda ""Biting and gritty, each poem is a snapshot of the ""flotsam and jetsam"" of the world, ""the origins of you and me / In the crucible of nuclear reaction."" Oh Witness Dey! confronts the politics of belonging and reflects on how individual experiences--those crucial ""umbilical cords""--connect us to our common history.""--Literary Review of Canada ""In addition to an invigorating use of documentary poetics, Mootoo uses linguistic maximalism to propel and punctuate the text. One such example is a list...she repeats throughout the book, and it functions to draw connections between disparate peoples' experiences across the vast scope of the text."" --melanie brannagan frederiksen, Winnipeg Free Press ""The story of how Europe's rapacity accelerated in the wake of 'discovery' is timely and inexhaustible, and these poems bear impassioned witness to a world that has raced past its precipice."" --Kaie Kellough, Griffin Poetry Prize-winning author of Magnetic Equator ""These poems remind us of the importance of looking back, because history defines our present and our future, as the past is not past, and the greed and violence echo down generations. Mootoo's voice captures that echo and yet transmutes it, elevates it into song."" --Kaie Kellough, Griffin Poetry Prize-winning author of Magnetic Equator"