Antigua and Barbuda is often written about, but less often read with care. The island appears in travel brochures, investment pitches, and passing geopolitical footnotes, yet its intellectual, cultural, and political life is rarely engaged on its own terms. This list is not intended to be exhaustive or nostalgic. It is an entry point into how Antigua has been imagined, narrated, analysed, and contested, both by Antiguans themselves and by those who have taken the island seriously enough to study it closely.

These ten books move across fiction, memoir, sociology, political economy, cultural analysis, and investigative reporting. Together, they offer a fuller picture of Antigua and Barbuda as a lived place shaped by colonial inheritance, migration, language, labour, ambition, and power.

Editor’s Note

This is not a ranked list. The order in which these books appear does not reflect hierarchy, popularity, or literary value. Each text earns its place for different reasons: historical significance, cultural insight, intellectual influence, or sustained relevance. 

Lucy

Jamaica Kincaid

Although much of Lucy unfolds outside Antigua, the island is its psychological origin point. The novel follows a young Antiguan woman navigating migration, intimacy, and selfhood, while carrying the unresolved weight of colonial education and upbringing. It is a study of what leaves with you when you leave Antigua, and what never does.

Annie John

Jamaica Kincaid

Set in Antigua, Annie John explores girlhood under colonial rule, tracing the intersection of family, schooling, discipline, and rebellion. It remains one of the most influential Caribbean novels of the twentieth century and offers an intimate account of how authority, love, and control shape Antiguan childhood.

Musical Youth

Joanne C. Hillhouse

A contemporary Antiguan novel centred on creativity, ambition, and constraint. Hillhouse examines what it means to be young and talented in a small state where opportunity is unevenly distributed and success often requires leaving. The novel is grounded, unsentimental, and deeply local in its sensibility.

The Boy from Willow Bend

Joanne C. Hillhouse

The Boy from Willow Bend is written for younger readers but resonant across ages, this novel is rooted firmly in Antigua. It explores family, community, masculinity, and belonging, and is significant for building a literary tradition that speaks directly to Antiguan youth rather than only about them.

Journeys in Caribbean Thought

Paget Henry

Journeys in Caribbean Thought: The Paget Henry Reader outlines the trajectory of Henry’s scholarly career, beginning and ending with his most recent work on the distinctive character of Africana and Caribbean philosophy and political and intellectual leadership in his home of Antigua and Barbuda.

Caribbean Time Bomb

Robert Coram

Caribbean Time Bomb: The United States’ Complicity in the Corruption of Antigua is an investigative work examining political corruption, drug trafficking, and international intrigue in the Eastern Caribbean, with Antigua and Barbuda as a central case study. The book situates Antigua within a wider web of Cold War geopolitics, organised crime, and small-state vulnerability, offering an external but detailed account of how global forces intersected with local power structures.

Guns for Antigua

Louis Jacques Blom-Cooper QC

Guns for Antigua is a 1990 official inquiry report authored by Louis Jacques Blom-Cooper QC, published by Gerald Duckworth & Co. for the Government of Antigua and Barbuda. The book investigates the 1989 arms scandal in which weapons shipped from Israel to Antigua were allegedly rerouted toward Colombia. It remains a key document in Caribbean political and legal history.

To Shoot Hard Labour

Keithlyn B. Smith and Fernando C. Smith

To Shoot Hard Labour: The Life and Times of Samuel Smith, an Antiguan Workingman 1877–1982 is an oral-history–based biography written by Keithlyn B. Smith and Fernando C. Smith. First published in 1986 by Smith & Smith Publishers (Ontario), the book chronicles more than a century of Antiguan life through the recollections of Samuel “Papa Sammy” Smith, a laborer and community elder.

The Way We Talk and Other Antiguan Folkways

Joy Lawrence

 The Way We Talk and Other Antiguan Folkways serves as both a cultural record and instructional guide to the Antiguan and Barbudan Creole language, presenting vocabulary, idioms, and examples with English translations. Lawrence combines humor and storytelling with scholarly intent, blending folklore, proverbs, folk songs, and local customs to illustrate the linguistic creativity of Antiguans and Barbudans.

A Small Place

Jamaica Kincaid

No serious reading list about Antigua is complete without this text. A Small Place is a blistering critique of colonialism, tourism, corruption, and historical amnesia. It is widely read, frequently misunderstood, and still deeply unsettling, which is precisely why it endures.

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