Jamaican Kwame McPherson cops 2023 Commonwealth Short Story top prize
JAMAICAN writer Kwame McPherson has been announced as the overall winner of the world’s most global literature prize.
McPherson, who this year entered the competition for a reported seventh time, beat 6,641 entrants worldwide to take the £5,000 prize.
The Commonwealth Foundation announced his win during an online ceremony — presented by Jamaican journalist Dionne Jackson Miller — in which he, and the other four regional winners, talked about their writing and read short extracts from their stories. McPherson is the first Jamaican to win the prize.
McPherson’s winning story Ocoee interweaves Caribbean folklore and stories from African American history.
It takes its name from a town in Florida where, in November 1920, dozens of AfricanAmericans were murdered in a brutal, racially aggravated attack.
The story centres on an exhausted driver who is pulled over by the police on a lonely road outside Ocoee. As he hears about the terrible history of the town, he also rediscovers a connection with his own past.
McPherson says he was inspired to write “a mishmash of African American reality and history, and Caribbean folklore” because he felt that “there are so many stories in the African Diaspora experience that are not well known and can be told to open others to that experience”.
The judge representing the Caribbean region, Saint Lucian poet and novelist Mac Donald Dixon, said: “Ocoee traverses genres. Although not set in the Caribbean, the food, the flavours, the people, narration, appearances and disappearances are all there and happening in a logical sequence that imbues the short story with life. It is palpable; there is nothing incredulous about it.”
Chair of the judges, Pakistani writer and translator Bilal Tanweer, says Ocoee forces a reckoning with the challenge that confronts all writers in the post-colonial world: How to write about a world that has been destroyed without any traces.
“McPherson takes on the extraordinarily difficult challenge of writing about a past that has left no evidence of its existence. Ocoee’s accomplishment is how it achieves this thorny task with simplicity, humility, and real heart.
“It is a story that resonates deeply and leaves us with a glimpse of all the ghosts that continue to haunt the present, and, in the process, performs one of the most essential tasks of writing — to bear witness to our condition and to remind us, again, what it means to be human,” said Tanweer.
Dr Anne T Gallagher AO, director general of the Commonwealth Foundation, the intergovernmental organisation that administers the prize, welcomed, “a beautiful, painful tale; a story that, once again, reminds us of the many and varied histories that have shaped our modern Commonwealth”.
McPherson, who lives in Kingston, Jamaica, and names Stephen King as one of his favourite writers, said, “When I began my writing journey it was not a conscious decision, it was just something I enjoyed doing. Creating and imagining worlds, sharing occurrences and experiences that brought no end of joy in seeing a reader engage and find pleasure in what I have produced.
“Having the ability to provoke thought, interest, or move a reader from one mental and emotional state to the next is a skill within itself and one I have been blessedly bestowed with and do not take for granted. The culmination of that ability is where I am today, winning a prestigious award, not only for the Caribbean but for the entire Commonwealth.
“That is no mean feat. I am humbled since I stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before, especially those scribes, griots and storytellers of our story, fulfilling a purpose I now live, walk and breathe. I am extremely proud I have represented my many friends, family and, importantly, my country Jamaica, in the way that I have.’
McPherson is a past student of London Metropolitan University and the University of Westminster. He is a 2007 Poetic Soul winner and was the first Jamaican Flash Fiction Bursary awardee for The Bridport Prize: International Creative Writing Competition in 2020.
A prolific writer, McPherson is a recent contributor to Flame Tree Publishing’s (UK) diversewriting anthologies and a contributor to The Heart of a Black Man anthology to be published in Los Angeles, which tells personal, inspiring, uplifting and empowering stories from influential and powerful black men.
The Commonwealth Short Story Prize is free to enter and is awarded annually for the best piece of unpublished short fiction from the Commonwealth.
It is the only prize in the world for which entries can be submitted in Bengali, Chinese, Creole, French, Greek, Malay, Portuguese, Samoan, Swahili, Tamil, and Turkish as well as English.
As part of the Commonwealth Foundation’s partnership with The London Library, the overall winner receives two years’ full membership to the library and the regional winners receive a year’s full membership.
The literary magazine Granta has published all of the regional winning stories of the 2023 Commonwealth Short Story Prize, including Ocoee.
Submissions for the 2024 Commonwealth Short Story Prize will open on September 1, 2023.