Born in
St. Lucia in the eastern Caribbean, Lucien grew up in the town of
Gros Islet on the island's north. He attended
St Mary's College in
Castries (1999–2004), While in his third year reading literature and theatre arts at the
University of the West Indies (UWI),
St Augustine campus, in
Trinidad, he was inspired by the groundbreaking Caribbean writer
Kamau Brathwaite, whom he appreciated as "a culturally engaged poet". Lucien has stated: "I started writing poetry seriously when I started UWI in 2008. What I was writing before was coming from a very empty place and it was not much anyway." Lucien has since had a great deal of success, with his work being published in journals and other publications, including
Small Axe,
Wasafiri,
BIM magazine,
The Caribbean Review of Books,
Caribbean Beat,
Washington Square Review, and the anthology
Beyond Sangre Grande, edited by
Cyril Dabydeen. Some of Lucien's poetry has been translated into other languages, appearing in Dutch in the literary magazine
Tortuca, in Italian in the journal
El Ghibli, and in Mandarin. Awards he has received awards include first prize in the poetry category of the Small Axe Prize 2013, and the overall
OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature 2015 for his 2014 debut collection of poems,
Sounding Ground, which was also shortlisted for the
Guyana Prize for Caribbean Literature in 2015. In the
Journal of West Indian Literature, Laurence Breiner wrote: "A distinctive and recognizable voice runs through all of Lucien’s poems, but his tonal variety is both wide and protean. There is a seriousness in his work—even in his wit—which has to do with his respect for the heft of a people’s lived life, and not with any darkness of vision, or moodiness, or angst. His poems have the kind of life-energy to be found in any fresh shovelful of soil. This is poetry of the ground, of the yard and the schoolyard and the provision ground. Lucien digs deep, plants deep, and draws upon depths of resource. In nearly every one of these poems we sense power in reserve, presences that can be felt." ==Selected writings==