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Kettly Mars was born on 3 September, 1958 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is a Kettly Mars is Haitian poet and novelist Haitian poet and novelist. Discover Kettly Mars's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 65 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 65 years old
Zodiac Sign Virgo
Born 3 September 1958
Birthday 3 September
Birthplace Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Nationality Haiti

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 3 September. She is a member of famous poet with the age 65 years old group.

Kettly Mars Height, Weight & Measurements

At 65 years old, Kettly Mars height not available right now. We will update Kettly Mars's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Kettly Mars Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Kettly Mars worth at the age of 65 years old? Kettly Mars’s income source is mostly from being a successful poet. She is from Haiti. We have estimated Kettly Mars's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
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Source of Income poet

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Timeline

Kettly Mars is a Haitian poet and novelist.

She writes in French, and her books have been translated into Kreyòl, English, Italian, Dutch, Danish, and Japanese.

1958

Mars was born on September 3, 1958, in Port-au-Prince.

After completing a degree in Classics, Mars pursued training in administration – working as an administrative assistant for a number of years.

Once in her thirties, Mars began to dedicate her time to writing.

2005

Presenting her novel at the Alliance Française d'Haïti in 2005, Mars cited the need to "lucidly, respectfully, and honestly" evoke the Vodou tradition in Haiti because it is too frequently treated like "a mirror in which [Haitians] refuse to see themselves."

One of Mars' most powerful novels, Saisons sauvages recounts the kidnapping of a journalist named Daniell Leroy during the early years of François Duvalier's dictatorship.

Although the narration shifts between Daniel's journal and other characters, Nirvah Leroy, Daniel's wife, is the central figure of the narrative.

Throughout the novel, Nirvah searches for traces of Daniel's whereabouts, visiting the Secretary of State Raoul Vincent in order to gather information, talking with neighbors and family members, and scouring a captive Port-au-Prince to find her husband.

Nirvah eventually discovers that her husband has been imprisoned by the government for his seditious, communist writing and stands very little chance of ever being released.

Keeping the memory of her husband alive by reading his intimate journal, Nirvah attempts to maintain the lives she and her family lived before the Duvalier regime tore it apart.

Among other themes, Saisons sauvages is a reflection on dictatorship, gendered and sexual violence, and the uses of Vodou in Haiti during the reign of François Duvalier.

Saisons sauvages is Mars' novel which has received the most critical attention, especially in the North American academy, with entire book chapters and articles dedicated to the novel.

2010

Aux Frontières de la soif is a novel set in the aftermath of the earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12, 2010.

According to Martin Munro, Mars did not wish to write a novel about the 2010 earthquake because it represented a clichéd "duty" of Haitian artists.

However, while traveling to the port of La Gonave Mars witnessed the dysfunction of the "camps" set up by various NGOs following the earthquake and was compelled to write Aux Frontières de la soif.

Camp Canaan, which is represented in the novel, resembles other "relief camps" established in Haiti as temporary housing sites that eventually morphed into semi-permanent locales.

Camps like Corail are described and depicted in works like Jonathan M. Katz's The Big Truck That Went By: How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster and Raoul Peck's Assistance mortelle.

The plot follows Fito Belmar and his incursions into Canaan as he engages in sexual acts with women and girls reduced to prostitution following the earthquake, qualifying Fito as a pedophile.

The brutal reality of the situation in Canaan is accompanied by the arrival of Fito's Japanese friend Tatsumi, a professor of Francophone Caribbean literature who has come to write about the earthquake.

As Munro notes, both Fito and Tatsumi profit off of the earthquake in various ways – one through pernicious sexual activities and the other via a more subtle intellectual opportunism.

In Aux Frontières de la soif, Mars issues a reflection on the internal and external pressures on Haiti and Haitians in the wake of a humanitarian disaster.

Mars' most recent novel, Je suis vivant tells the story of a bourgeois Haitian family that suddenly has to welcome Alexandre back home after the mental health facility where he has spent the last three decades is forced to shut down because of the January 12, 2010 earthquake.

While in the institution, Alexandre has visions, hears voices, and witnesses the earthquake from inside the walls.

He notes that for once the cries and histrionics came from outside the institution's walls.

Alexandre, however, is not the only character to make a return to the family house in the suburb of Fleur-de-Chêne.

His younger sister, Marylène, returns to Haiti after studying and launching a career as a painter in Brussels.

Coming back to the Caribbean, Marylène finds herself worn out, adorned with a pacemaker, and seeks new beginnings as she falls in love with Norah, the woman she has employed to model for her recent paintings.

These parallel returns relieve and weigh heavily on Éliane, the family matriarch and aging mother who is admittedly being kept alive by the virtue of a series of medications and careful attention.

Throughout the novel the narrative voice shifts between first person accounts from the various siblings and Éliane, a style that Mars employed in Saisons sauvages.

In the end, Je suis vivant is a novel about returns and re-discovery; one that explores questions of ability, sexuality, and family.

2014

Her work has appeared in various literary anthologies in both French and Kreyòl, such as the 2014 Anthologie bilingue de la poésie créole haïtienne de 1986 à nos jours edited and translated by Mehdi Chalmers, Inéma Jeudi, Jean-Laurent Lhérisson, and Lyonel Trouillot.

2015

In a 2015 interview with Radio France Internationale, Mars said that once she was in her mid-thirties "everything that had constituted my life, until that point, started to lose its significance."

Apart from being a mother, Mars says that her writing is "the most satisfying gift she has ever been given."

The author of numerous collections of poems, short stories, young adult novels, and seven novels, Mars is one of the most active contemporary Haitian writers.

In 2015, her novel Je suis vivant was awarded the Prix Ivoire pour la Littérature Africaine d’Expression Francophone at a ceremony in Abidjan in November.

Mars' first novel, Kasalé is a portrait of a rural Haitian community set in Rivière-Froide, not far from Port-au-Prince.

In this novel, Mars explores rural family dynamics, the culture of the Lakou, and Vodou in a way that places Kasalé in a genealogy of novels of rural Haiti like Fonds des Nègres by Marie Vieux-Chauvet and Les Gouverneurs de la rosée by Jacques Roumain.

Saisons sauvages is the first of Mars' works to be translated into English (translation by Jeanine Herman), which appeared in the University of Nebraska Press's French translation series in the summer of 2015.

The critical reception of the novel has been strong, and the novel received the Prix Ivoire in November 2015.