What We're Reading - Lockdown Bank Holiday Edition

Whether delving into chunky historical narratives or listening to short story podcasts, we’ve all been approaching reading differently during lockdown. Our reading habits can take us back in time, allow us to examine our present, or give us hope for the future. In time for the May bank holiday weekend, the Literature team shares what they’ve been reading lately.  You People by Nikita LalwaniNikita Lalwani's You People follows Nia, a 19-year-old British-Indian girl, and Shan, a Tamil refugee, who work at a London pizzeria and are both in thrall – in different ways – to the restaurant's enigmatic manager Tuli. Initially, Nia and Shan don't have much in common, and their differing views of Tuli reflect this. Nia wants to escape her troubled family, while Shan longs to bring his wife and child to the UK; Nia, having been sent down from Oxford, wants to escape the bonds of the establishment, while Shan longs for Britain's elite to grant him indefinite leave to remain. To Nia, Tuli is mercurial and charming, glimpsed offering deals and generous loans; from Shan's perspective, he's to be courted and obeyed, able to use his influence and wealth to bring Shan's family to safety.Things change when Nia voluntarily enters a world that Shan can’t escape, and You People uses a gripping, thriller-like structure to reflect this. But even as the jaws of the trap close around them, and the protagonists rely on quick thinking and deduction to survive, the novel creates a larger tension from... Continue reading at 'British Council global'

[ British Council global | 2020-05-07 13:58:54 UTC ]

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Destination: New Zealand, by Madeleine Dorst

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The Things They Carried is finally being adapted for film (and the cast is insane).

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What Do We Owe Our Comunity in a Time of Crisis?

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Riot Recommendation: 53 of the Most Outstanding Short Stories You’ve Read

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WATCH: Tiny Nightmares: Very Short Stories of Horror

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Wole Soyinka is publishing his first novel in five decades.

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Dispatches from an Overheated World: On “Tales of Two Planets”

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Margaret Busby: how Britain's first black female publisher revolutionised literature – and never gave up

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Monkey Island is getting a $160 anthology release this month

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Korean American experience resonates in ‘The Prince of Mournful Thoughts’

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How Much Does Your Job Shape Your Identity?

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