Legendary
Trinidadian story-teller, Paul Keens-Douglas, expresses with lively recitation
the tale of Tanti Merle's visit to a cricket game at the Oval.
Paul Keens-Douglas wrote the short story Tanti at de Oval to give the readers a colorful example
of life in the Caribbean. Tanti at de Oval is about the writer's aunt, Tanti
Merle, and her first visit to The Queen's Park Oval (the 'Oval') in Trinidad to
watch an important cricket match between Trinidad and the Combined Islands.
Tanti Merle is a colorful character who likes to be in control. Some Caribbean
natives would describe her as 'liking her own way.'
Paul
Keens-Douglas is a Playwright, Writer and Performer
Paul Keens-Douglas
is a Trinidadian-born playwright, writer and performer whose voice is well
known in the Caribbean. A writer for over thirty years, Keens-Douglas' narratives
have aired on several radio stations. His stories offer engaging colloquial
language, vivid imagery and relatable tales. Keens-Douglas is also a
motivational speaker and recently in 2008 was the keynote speaker at the Virgin
Islands' Humanities Council's 'Virgin Voices: A Literary and Spoken Word Festival'
in St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands.
A Caribbean
Story: Tanti at de Oval
Tanti at de Oval is
written in first person as the narrator tells the tale of Tanti Merle's antics
from her preparation for the trip to the match to her behavior at the game.
With the aid of colorful illustrations by Joan Camps- Campin, Keens-Douglas
shares how Tanti Merle embarrassed herself and her companion at the Oval. Her
antics include her large basket of goodies, her selection of a taxi bus and her
loud cheering at the match. The story hits a climax as the match concludes and
Tanti nearly caused a riot among the spectators.
Keens-Douglas writes "Dat same Tanti Merle dat look as if butter can't
melt in she mout. It take me 'bout two hours to get she out de Oval. She lose
de basket an' de Parasol mash-up."
Caribbean
Language & Life
Aspects of
Caribbean life highlighted in Tanti at de Oval are the significance of cricket,
the dialectal language and the camaraderie and rivalry fostered by local
sports. In relation to the language, Tanti at de Oval is written in dialect but
a glossary is provided to describe such terms as "jook out" which according
to the writer means "to dig out with (a) sharp object."