Through luminescent light, ancestral paths, and a Caribbean spirit-inflected world, Naniki explores the musings and inner workings of the deep blue — the Caribbean Sea — and its shape-shifting sea beings.
As the sea mirrors the light from the blue skies, and its depths are exposed by daggers of sunlight, so too Naniki reveals and honours the Indigenous roots of the Caribbean and its people, whose destiny is tied to the sea, the vessel of collective memory.
Amana and Skelele are made of water and air, their essence intertwined with Taino and African ancestry. They evolved as elemental beings of the Anthropocene, and shape-shifting with their naniki (active spirits) or animal avatars, they begin an archipelagic journey throughout the Caribbean Basin to see the strange future they dreamed of. Until devastation erupts.
Tasked by their elders to go back in time to the source of the First People’s knowledge, they must surmount historical and mythological challenges alike. How can they navigate and overcome these obstacles to regenerate themselves, their love, their islands, and their seas?
A RARE MACHINES BOOK
As the sea mirrors the light from the blue skies, and its depths are exposed by daggers of sunlight, so too Naniki reveals and honours the Indigenous roots of the Caribbean and its people, whose destiny is tied to the sea, the vessel of collective memory.
Amana and Skelele are made of water and air, their essence intertwined with Taino and African ancestry. They evolved as elemental beings of the Anthropocene, and shape-shifting with their naniki (active spirits) or animal avatars, they begin an archipelagic journey throughout the Caribbean Basin to see the strange future they dreamed of. Until devastation erupts.
Tasked by their elders to go back in time to the source of the First People’s knowledge, they must surmount historical and mythological challenges alike. How can they navigate and overcome these obstacles to regenerate themselves, their love, their islands, and their seas?
A RARE MACHINES BOOK
Authors
- Pages
- 200
- Published in
- Toronto, CA
Table of Contents
- Cover 1
- Half Title 2
- Title 4
- Copyright 6
- Dedication 6
- Naniki 9
- Lightning Bank 11
- Boriken 23
- Cuba 37
- Myaamia 45
- Bulbancha 23
- The Gulf of Mexico 59
- Yamaye 73
- Ayiti 79
- Ke Choreto 89
- Caribbean Sea Basin 95
- Ichirouganaim 101
- Camerhogne 109
- Tobago 121
- Kairi 127
- Orinoco 131
- Guyana 137
- Roraima Tepui 153
- The Caribbean Sea 159
- Author's Note 171
- Giving Thanks 175
- A Glossary of Caribbean Indigenous, African, and other words used by Amana and Skelele 181
- Notes 187
- Bibliography 191
- About the Author 195