The Chills at Will Podcast podcast

Episode 288 with Camille U. Adams, Author of How to Be Unmothered, and Master Wordsmith of the Precise and the Flowery, the Banal and the Extraordinary

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Notes and Links to Camille Adams’ Work

 

 

 

   CAMILLE U. ADAMS, Ph.D. was born and raised in beautiful Trinidad and Tobago. She is the author of the explosive memoir How To Be Unmothered: a Trinidadian memoir, finalist in the Restless Books Prize in New Immigrant Writing 2023.

   Camille is a memoirist, a poet, and a nature writer. She has been awarded Best of The Net—nonfiction 2024. She has received five Pushcart Prize nominations and three Best of the Net nominations for her memoir writing. Camille’s work has also received recognition as a notable essay in Best American Essays 2022. Her writing has been long-listed in the Graywolf Creative nonfiction Prize 2022 and selected as a finalist for The 2021 Orison Anthology Award in Nonfiction.

   Her other honours include an awarded fellowship as an inaugural Tin House Reading Fellow, an inaugural Granta nature writing workshop fellowship, an inaugural Anaphora Arts Italy Writing Retreat Fellowship, a McKnight Doctoral Fellowship, a Community of Writers Fellowship, A VONA scholarship, and a Roots Wounds Words Fellowship.

   A Tin House Summer Workshop alum, Camille has served as a juried reader for Tin House for two consecutive years and as a moderator for two author panels. She has also received support from Kenyon Writers Workshop, Grubstreet, and others.

  In addition, Camille has been an associate CNF editor at Variant Lit and an assistant memoir editor at Split Lip Magazine and at The Account. She has long taught English and creative writing, emphasising the importance of strong craft, beautiful prose, and ugly truths.

  Having earned her MFA in Poetry from City College CUNY and her Ph.D. in Creative Nonfiction from FSU, Camille currently teaches creative writing and literature in New York City. She is at work on her second memoir.

Buy How to Be Unmothered: A Trinidadian Memoir

 

Camille U. Adams' Website 

 

Excerpt from How to Be Unmothered

 

 

At about 2:55, Camille talks about her ideal writing environments and she and Pete bond over Pete’s 

At about 5:00, Camille responds to Pete’s question about what books and stories resonate with her students-she references Javier Zamora and Derek Walcott and Jamaica Kincaid

At about 8:00, the two discuss purchasing details for How to Be Unmothered

At about 9:15, Camille shares great early feedback for the memoir 

At about 11:35, Camille responds to Pete’s question about her early reading loves

At about 14:30, Pete cites Jamaica Kincaid’s masterful work and Camille shouts out George Lanning, Samuel Selvon, Paul Keyes Douglas, and other masterful Caribbean writers

At about 16:50, Camille responds to Pete’s questions about the “push-and-pull” of colonialist language and history in Trinidad

At about 21:00, Camille highlights Daniel José Older’s brilliant work as the two discuss evocative language 

At about 22:25, Camille cites calypso and its performances as a keen example of the dynamic nature of language  

At about 24:05, Camille and Pete discuss the book’s dedication and epigraph (eek-Pete first calls it an “epitath”), with Camille sharing an insightful story on an idea’s generative appearance in her head

At about 28:40, Camille responds to Pete’s question about the significance of her memoir’s chapter titles as different trees

At about 31:05, Pete and Camille set out the exposition for the memoir, especially the pivotal opening scene; Camille expounds on the long drive recounted and how it serves as a sort of cultural and historical tour of Trinidad

At about 35:00, Camille talks about her 

At about 36:25, Camille talks about the Trinidian term “hotfoot,” as the two discuss double standards for men and women

At about 38:20, No spoilers! as Pete highlights an evocative and creative section about rum

At about 40:55, Camille reflects on an “initiation” and on ideas of dominion over nature

At about 44:00, Camille examines ideas of being a child and expectations and tropes around parent-child alienations

At about 46:50, The two discuss an evocative series of scenes and ideas of intimacy and forced burdens

At about 49:40, Camille responds to Pete’s musings about the somatic sensations depicted in the book, including introducing the wise, apt saying: “there is no past tense in the body”

At about 54:00, Camille describes traumatic experiences heaped on children in general and on herself, as she reflects on ideas of “property” and a lack of agency

At about 58:00, Camille talks about why she can’t and won’t live with “unlove”

At about 1:00:00, Camille discusses ideas of joy and resilience and vulnerability and “strip[ping] words of meaning and connections to political and psychological consciousness 

At about 1:04:50, Camille highlights a meaningful song, The Journey” by Chris “Tambu” Herbert 

At about 1:07:40, Camille teases her second book

 

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    Please tune in for Episode 289 with Jahmal Mayfield, who writes gritty crime novels that touch on large social issues. His stellar SMOKE KINGS was inspired by Kimberly Jones’ passionate viral video, “How can we win?”

   This episode airs on August 26.

   Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.

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