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Tessa McWatt

    Tessa McWatt, a writer of Guyanese origin based in Canada, delves into the intricate themes of identity and belonging in her literary work. Her novels, recognized with multiple prestigious award nominations, explore the complexities of cultural encounters and the search for one's place in the world. Through her diverse writing endeavors, including interdisciplinary projects and community-based life writing, she seeks to unravel and share deeply personal narratives. McWatt's distinctive voice offers readers profound insights into the human experience of navigating belonging.

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    Higher Ed
    The Snow Line
    Where Are You, Agnes?
    Shame On Me
    • 2021

      Four strangers from around the world arrive in India for a wedding. Together, they climb a mountain -- but will they see the same thing from the top? Londoner Reema, who left India before she could speak, is searching for a sign that will help her make a life-changing decision. In pensioner Jackson's suitcase is something he must let go of, but is he strong enough? Together with two unlikely companions, they take a road trip up a mountain deep in the Himalayas, heading for the snow line, where the ice begins. But even standing in the same place, surrounded by magnificent views, they see things differently. As they ascend higher and higher, they must learn to cross the lines that divide them.

      The Snow Line
    • 2020

      Where Are You, Agnes?

      • 44 pages
      • 2 hours of reading
      3.5(100)Add rating

      Where Are You, Agnes is a stunning imagining of abstract artist Agnes Martin's childhood and the ways in which it may have shaped her work as an adult.

      Where Are You, Agnes?
    • 2019

      Shame On Me

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      4.1(486)Add rating

      ‘What are you?’ Tessa McWatt knows first-hand that the answer to this question, often asked of people of colour by white people, is always more complicated than it seems. Is the answer English, Scottish, British, Caribbean, Portuguese, Indian, Amerindian, French, African, Chinese, Canadian? Like most families, hers is steeped in myth and the anecdotes of grandparents and parents who recount their histories through the lens of desire, aspiration, loss, and shame.In Shame On Me she unspools all the interwoven strands of her multicoloured inheritance, and knits them back together using additional fibres from literature and history to strengthen the weave of her refabricated tale. She dismantles her own body and examines it piece by piece to build a devastating and incisively subtle analysis of the race debate as it now stands, in this stunningly written exploration of who and what we truly are.

      Shame On Me
    • 2015

      Higher Ed

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading
      2.7(59)Add rating

      Francine would prefer to be thinner, but is happy enough to suffer her boss' manhandling of her ample hips if it helps her survive the next cull in Quality Assurance. She just wishes she could get the dead biker's crushed face out of her mind's eye.

      Higher Ed