

“But I try to consider events as if they’re happening to someone else. Between the oncologist and the party is an intense rumination on her choices, her life, and the pieces from which she’s managed to assemble an identity, however flawed. On the other end is a visit the narrator pays to her oncologist, where she discovers she has a decision to make. Her White boyfriend comes from a moneyed old family, and an invitation to his parents’ anniversary party-a gargantuan affair-frames one end of this slim, swiftly moving novel. “I am everything they told me to become,” she says. She works, and for as long as she can remember she has worked, in relentless pursuit of achievement, success, excellence. You’ve filled your notebook.A young Black woman considers her options.Īt the center of this brilliant debut is a young Black British woman who works in finance. Structuring An Entire Novel on A Single Sheet Of Paper, led by Andrew Meehan Quinn is an unforgettable novel about memory and radical forgiveness from award-winning Scottish…Ī new and exclusive event in collaboration with local author Steve Griffin.

The Bookshop in Wigtown is a bookworm's idyll - with thousands of books across nearly a mile of…Įm Strang and Peter Bennett - Visceral Scottish Novels Shaun Bythell - The Remainders of the Day: More Diaries from the Bookshop, Wigtown Join climate justice activist Mikaela Loach as she discusses her debut book and addresses how… The story unfolds in a series of vignettes that illustrate the extensive ways racism impinges on the narrator’s life, despite or because of her outward success.īen and Chris have discovered the internet and now they can’t stop. Assembly is a precise, powerful story that describes Britain’s colonial legacy and the experience of living in that world as a black British woman. Natasha Brown is a British novelist, whose debut novel Assembly was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize, the Folio Prize, the Orwell Prize for Fiction, the Betty Trask Prize, and longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize. It was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction 2022. The book weaves together themes of history, revolution and sisterhood, underscored by a desperate passion for a better world. Her second novel There are More Things follows the fortunes of two women - one Brazilian, one British - during the turbulent events and political upheaval of the last decade. Yara Rodrigues Fowler is a Brazilian-British novelist and activist from South London who was named as one of the top debut writers of 2019 (The Observer).
