Kevin Baldeosingh

Kevin Baldeosingh (born 1963)[1] is a Trinidadian newspaper columnist, author and Humanist, who has been involved in many controversial social issues, especially in respect to religious issues. He has worked with the Trinidad Express, Newsday and the Trinidad Guardian. In July 2017, after 25 years in the field, he ceased working as a journalist when his contract was not renewed by the Trinidad Guardian and he was not hired by any other media company.

Writing

In twenty years as a professional writer he has written more than 2,000 newspaper articles, over 30 periodical articles and papers, 20-plus short stories, and three novels. In 2007, his one-act play, The Comedian, was one of the four winning plays in the National Drama Association playwriting contest. He was also one of 15 prize-winning finalists in a 2007 international essay competition, organized by US-based "TRACE International" (a non-profit organization that develops and promotes anti-bribery programs), on official corruption and how to prevent it.[2]

Other work

He is a co-founder and chairman of the Trinidad and Tobago Humanist Association, the only organization of its kind in the Anglophone Caribbean. He is also vice-chair for ASPIRE (Advocates for Safe Parenthood: Improving Reproductive Equity), a lobby group seeking clarification and updating of Trinidad and Tobago’s laws on abortion, with the aim of reducing the health risks and maternal mortality associated with unsafe illegal abortions. He was regional Chairperson for the Commonwealth Writers Prize (Canada/Caribbean) for 2000 and 2001.[3]

Novels

  • The Autobiography of Paras P (1996), Heinemann Caribbean Writers Series. ISBN 0-435-98818-2
  • Virgin's Triangle (1997), Heinemann. ISBN 0-435-98947-2
  • The Ten Incarnations of Adam Avatar (2004), Peepal Tree Press ISBN 1-84523-000-0

Non-fiction

  • Caribbean History for CSEC (May 2011) Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-832999-7

References

  1. Author information at Peepal Tree Press.
  2. "Baldeosingh in finals of corruption contest, Trinidad & Tobago's Newsday, 5 August 2007. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  3. Choudhury, Sunetra (2000), "Coetzee, Moore get awards but Rushdie surfaces to steal the show", Indian Express, 16 April 2000. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
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