Feature Articles:
Focus on Creolist: Salikoko Mufwene, by Robert Chaundenson
Da Jesus Book: Hawai’i Creole English, by Suzanne Romaine
Obituaries: Stephen Wurm & Carla Lujiks
Salikoko Mufwene: From the Congo to Chicago, by Michel DeGraff
Book Reviews:
Out of Africa: African influences in Atlantic Creoles. By Mikael Parkvall
Les îles du Cap-Vert aujourd’hui: Perdues dans l’immensité, by Nicolas Quint
An introduction to pidgins and creoles. By John Holm
Relexification in Creole and Non-Creole Languages, with Special Attention to Haitian Creole, Modern Hebrew, Romani and Rumanian. Edited by Julia Horvath & Paul Wexler
Spreading the Word: The issue of diffusion among the Atlantic Creoles (Westminster Creolistic Series 6). Edited by Magnus Huber and Mikael Parkvall
Entwisted Tongues. Comparative Creole Literatures. By George Lang
Creoles, Pidgins, and Sundry Languages: Essays in Honor of Pieter Seuren. Ed. by Jacques Arends
Foreign Language Teaching and Language Minority Education. By Kathryn A. Davis (ed)
Contents of previous volumes of The Carrier Pidgin
From Contact to Creole and Beyond. Edited by Philip Baker
Reviewed by Jeffrey WilliamsFrench and Creole in Louisiana. Edited by Albert
Reviewed by Karin SpeedyDefining Jamaican Fiction: Marronage and the Discourse of Survival. By Barbara Lalla
Reviewed by Lise WinerGrammaticalization in creoles: the development of determiners and relative clauses in Sranan. By Adrienne, Bruyn
Reviewed by Magnus HuberChanging meanings, changing functions: Papers relating to grammaticalization in contact languages. Edited by Philip Baker and Anand
Reviewed by Marlyse BaptistaContact languages: A wider perspective. Edited by Sarah G. Thomason
Reviewed by Michael AcetoThe Morphosyntax of Nominal and Verbal Categories in Capeverdean Creole. By Marlyse Baptista
Reviewed by Alain KihmLafami Bonplezi. Florida. By Maude Hertelou
Sezisman! Pou Lafanmi Bonplezi. By Maude Hertelou
Reviewed byMarie-Annick Gourne
From the Editor
Colonial Vestiges in Kamtok Pronunciation by Augustin Simo Bobda
Obituaries: Chris Corne and John Joseph Maria Figueroa
News on our Creolists and Poetry by Trefossa
Book Reviews
Big Wok: Storian blong Wol Wo Tu long Vanuatu [Big Work: The story of World War II in Vanuatu]. By Lamont Lindstrom and James Gwero
Reviewed by Miriam Meyerhoff
Écrire en créole. Oralité et écriture aux Antilles. By Marie-Christine Hazaël-Massieux, ParisReviewed by David Sutcliffe
Contact Languages: Pidgins and Creoles. By Mark SebbaReviewed by Ingo Plag
L’angolar. Un créole afro-portugais parlé à São Tomé. By Philippe MaurerReviewed by John Ladhams
Substrate influence in the formation of Surinamese Plantation Creole: A consideration of sociohistorical data and linguistic data from Ndyuka and Gbe. By Bettina M. MiggeReviewed by John McWhorter
Lenguas criollas de base lexical española y portuguesa. Edited by Klaus ZimmermannReviewed by John Ladhams
English Haitian-Creole Science Dictionary. By Féquière Vilsaint and Maude HeurtelouReviewed by Jeffrey Allen
Dictionary of Louisiana Creole. By Albert Valdman, Thomas A. Klingler, Margaret M. Marshall & Kevin J. RottetReviewed by Annegret Bollée
Les Créoles: l’Indispensable Survie. By Marie-Christine Hazaël-MassieuxReviewed by Paul B. Garrett
The structure and status of pidgins and creoles. Including selected papers from the meetings of the Society for Pidgin and Creole Linguistics. Edited by Arthur K. Spears and Donald WinfordReviewed by Adrienne Bruyn
Limonese Creole: A Case of Contact Induced Language Change. By Elizabeth WinklerReviewed by Geneviève Escure
Ndyuka. (Descriptive Grammars series, 18). By George L. Huttar, & Mary L. HuttarReviewed by Bettina Migge
Die haitianischen Tiersprichwörter und ihre Herkunft. By Sonja FuchsReviewed by Angela Bartens
Kamtok: The Unifying Language of Cameroon by Miriam Ayafor
Obituary: Fred Cassidy
Poetry by Donna Weir-Soley and Malachi Smith
Broken English,The Creole Language of Carriacou. Studies in Ethnolinguistics, By Ronald E. KephartReviewed by Laura Wright
Talkin that talk: Language, culture and education in African America. Geneva Smitherman, London: Routledge. 2000.
Beyond Ebonics: Linguistic pride and racial prejudice. John Baugh. New York: Oxford University Press. 2000
Spoken Soul. John Russell Rickford and Russell John Rickford. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 2000.
Reviewed by John McWhorter
Processi di convergenza e differenziazione nelle lingue dell’Europa medievale e moderna [Processes of convergence and differentiation in the languages of Mediaeval and Modern Europe] .Edited by F. Fusco, V. Orioles & A. ParmeggianiReviewed by Hildo Honório do Couto
A Grammar of Belizean Creole: Compilations from Two Existing United States Dialects. By Laurie A. GreeneReviewed by Elizabeth Grace Winkler
El Caribe hispánico: perspectivas, linguisticas actuales. Homenaje a Manuel Álvarez Nazario. Edited by Luis A. Ortiz LopezReviewed by Frank Martinus
Aspectos del lenguaje afronegroide en Venezuela. By William W. MegenneyReviewed by Alexandra Alvarez
From French to Creole: The development of new vernaculars in the French colonial world. By Chris CorneReviewed by Morris Goodman
Saint-Barthélemy: une énigme linguistique. By Louis-Jean Calvet and Robert ChaundensonReviewed by Julianne Maher
Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage, by Richard AllsoppReviewed by Ian Hancock
The Sango language and its lexicon (Sênda-yângâ tî sängö). Travaux de l’institut de linguistique de Lund 32. By Christina ThornellReviewed by Helma Pasch
A language of our own: the genesis of Michif, the mixed Cree-French language of the Canadian Métis. By Peter BakkerReviewed by Rik van Gijn