Yema Lucilda Hunter | |
---|---|
Born | Yema Lucilda Caulker 15 July 1943 Freetown, Sierra Leone |
Died | 21 August 2022 78–79) | (aged
Education | Annie Walsh Memorial School |
Alma mater | University of Reading; North-Western Polytechnic; Loughborough University |
Occupation(s) | Librarian, novelist and biographer |
Family | Caulker family of Sierra Leone |
Lucilda Hunter, née Caulker (15 July 1943 – 21 August 2022) was a Sierra Leonean librarian, novelist and biographer, who wrote under the name Yema Lucilda Hunter.[1]
Life
Yema Lucilda Hunter was born on 15 July 1943 in Freetown,[1] to parents Richard Edmund Kelfa-Caulker (the first African principal of the Albert Academy, who later became a diplomat, serving as Sierra Leone High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Ambassador to the United States) and Olivette Hannah Stuart (from a prominent African-Caribbean family, whose grandfather, Melvin Stuart, came from the Bahamas in 1878 to work for the colonial administration).[2] She was educated at the Annie Walsh Memorial School,[3] before undertaking university studies in England. She gained a BA degree from the University of Reading in 1964, a post-graduate diploma in librarianship from North-Western Polytechnic in 1966, and a master's degree in philosophy from Loughborough University.[1]
Hunter worked as a librarian at the Sierra Leone Library Board, in the Medical Library at Connaught Hospital in Freetown, and with the World Health Organization in Brazzaville.[1] She took early retirement in 1999, and that year was made a fellow of the Library Association.
She lived with her husband in Accra, Ghana,[3] where she died, aged 79, on 21 August 2022.[2]
Works
- 1982. Road to Freedom. Ibadan: African Universities Press. (Later reissued in 2016 as Finding Freedom.)
- 1989. Bittersweet. London: Macmillan.
- 2006. Redemption Song. Freetown: Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
- 2012. Joy Came in the Morning, typewritten pre-publication circulation of Chapter One.
- 2013. Joy Came in the Morning. Accra: Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
- 2014. Nanna. Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
- 2015. An African Treasure: In Search of Gladys Casely-Hayford. Freetown: Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
- 2018. Her Name Was Aina. Freetown: Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
- 2022. Deep Waters. Freetown: Sierra Leonean Writers Series.
References
- 1 2 3 4 Jones, Wilma L., "Twenty Contemporary African Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliography", 1995. Accessed 15 February 2020.
- 1 2 Kanu, Kabs (25 August 2022). "Obituary : Lucilda Hunter". Cocorioko. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
- 1 2 Lucilda Hunter, Sierra Leonean Writers Series. Accessed 15 February 2020.