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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De’Shawn Charles Winslow wins 2019 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize.

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[ Literrary Hub | 2019-12-11 17:00:27 UTC ]
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5 Goals for Making Your Anthology the Best That It Can Be

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[ Writer's Digest | 2019-12-11 10:00:21 UTC ]
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Bob Geldof anthology snapped up by Faber

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[ The Bookseller | 2019-12-10 12:26:27 UTC ]
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How Journalism Made a Poet Out of Me

In 1977––just three years after the publication of Tom Wolfe’s The New Journalism, a landmark, incendiary anthology that declared journalists using fictional technique had erased the novel as literature’s dominant form—I was fresh out of college and had just landed my first job as a journalist.... Continue reading at Literrary Hub

[ Literrary Hub | 2019-12-06 09:48:12 UTC ]
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Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year - meet the shortlist

Raymond AntrobusWho/ What inspired you to start writing? I never started writing poetry with the intention of writing books until publishers approached me. I was happy to write poems and travel and read the poems for audiences. I live poem by poem. The idea of a book of poems doesn’t really... Continue reading at British Council global

[ British Council global | 2019-12-05 12:09:15 UTC ]
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Harvill Secker wins Elaine Feeney's first novel at auction

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[ The Bookseller | 2019-12-02 15:33:42 UTC ]
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Lit Hub Daily: December 2, 2019

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[ Literrary Hub | 2019-12-02 11:30:22 UTC ]
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What Was the First Book You Fell in Love With?

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[ Literrary Hub | 2019-12-02 09:49:11 UTC ]
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Why All Americans Should Read “Celestial Bodies”

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[ Electric Literature | 2019-11-26 11:59:00 UTC ]
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[ The Bookseller | 2019-11-26 03:34:10 UTC ]
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[ Interesting Literature | 2019-11-15 15:00:55 UTC ]
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Mantel's Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies to be reissued with 'stunning' new design

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[ The Bookseller | 2019-11-14 03:36:27 UTC ]
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The Woman Who Brought Dostoevsky and Chekhov to English Readers

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[ Literrary Hub | 2019-11-12 09:50:58 UTC ]
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[ The Paris Review | 2019-11-06 14:00:37 UTC ]
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[ Engadget | 2019-11-06 03:18:00 UTC ]
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[ British Council global | 2019-11-04 12:55:09 UTC ]
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[ The Bookseller | 2019-11-04 02:04:57 UTC ]
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[ Literrary Hub | 2019-10-31 17:27:27 UTC ]
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[ British Council global | 2019-10-30 09:49:28 UTC ]
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