The Dept. of English at the University of Toronto at Mississaugua (Erindale College) has established the Harold Sonny Ladoo award for creative writing, in celebration of Ladoo, a former student and graduate. (photograph by Graeme Gibson)
Fiction
No Pain Like This Body
Toronto: Anansi, 1972.
PS8573 .A35 N6
Publisher’s Synopsis
In the Indian settlements of Carib Island, the struggle of death and vitality is a daily experience. Seen through the eyes of a child that struggle is strange, terrifying, and utterly engrossing.
No Pain Like This Body traces the events that change the life of one family during the rainy season of August. The style is pungent and apparently naive; the events are among the central human rituals. The result is a simplicity which often sears.
Fiction
Yesterdays
Toronto: Anansi, 1974.
PS8573 .A35 Y35
Publisher’s Synopsis
Yesterdays is a bawdy, outrageously funny novel of West Indian life, detailing young Poonwa’s attempt to launch a Hindu Mission to Canada. He is driven less by religious fervor than by a need for revenge against the blonde Canadian woman sent to bring Christian salvation and suffering to the Heathen on the Island.
Selected Criticism and Interpretation
Kandiuk, Mary. “Harold Sonny Ladoo.” In Caribbean and South Asian Writers in Canada: A Bibliography of Their Works and of English-language Criticism. Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2007, 69-71.
PS8089.5 .C37 K36 2007
Links
House of Anansi Press website
Ladoo page on the Pancaribbean.com website
Dennis Lee’s poetic tribute The Death of Harold Ladoo