What the Island Asked of Me

They declared themselves free.
Britain came back with paratroopers.
They won dignity—but not independence.

In 1967, on a small Caribbean island few could place on a map, the people of Anguilla broke from a union they had never chosen and declared themselves free. Britain answered with force. The world dismissed it as absurd.

It wasn’t.

What happened on Anguilla was the Caribbean’s only bloodless revolution—a quiet act of defiance that forced an empire to respond, and left behind a promise that was never fully kept.

This is a work of narrative nonfiction about that moment and what followed: a story carried in memory, in testimony, and in the lives of those who lived it. It is also the account of an outsider drawn into that history, and asked—over time—not simply to witness it, but to remember.

Click the button below to read a writing sample that introduces the world of the book:

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