Joan Riley

Joan Riley (born 26 May 1958)[1] is a Jamaican-British author. Her 1985 debut novel The Unbelonging made her "the first Afro-Caribbean woman author to write about the experiences of Blacks in England".[2]

Biography

Joan Riley was born in Hopewell, Richmond, St. Mary, Jamaica, the youngest of eight children (six girls and two boys),[1][3] and was raised by her father after her mother died in childbirth.[4] She received her early education on that island before migrating in 1976 to the United Kingdom.[5] There she studied social work at the University of Sussex and the University of London.[6] She has worked at a drugs advisory agency and wrote about the experiences of Caribbean women.

She is the author of four novels; her first, The Unbelonging, published in 1985, is considered the first by a woman about the black experience in Britain. Riley was awarded the Voice award for her work in 1992, and the MIND prize in 1993 for A Kindness to the Children.[4] She has been featured in such anthologies as Daughters of Africa[7] and Her True-True Name.[3] She co-edited with Briar Wood Leave to Stay: Stories of Exile and Belonging (Virago, 1996), a collection of fiction and poetry by writers from India, the Caribbean, China, South Africa, the USSR, Canada, Australia and Pakistan, including Sujata Bhatt, Fred D'Aguiar, Michael Donaghy, Jane Duran, Michael Hoffman, Aamer Hussein, Mimi Khalvati, Adam Lively, Sindiwe Magona, Bharati Mukherjee, Hanan al-Shaykh, Janice Shinebourne and Zinovy Zinik.

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Unbelonging (London: The Women's Press, 1985)
  • Waiting in the Twilight (London: The Women's Press, 1987)
  • Romance (London: The Women's Press, 1988; new edition 1997)
  • A Kindness to the Children (London: The Women's Press, 1992)

Further reading

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gollark: Important internet infrastructure was designed and put into production last millennium when people assumed private networks and just ignored security concerns, and we still run it, sometimes with patches for the bigger problems which aren't actually anywhere near universally deployed.
gollark: Oh, and it's all a giant maze of interlocking abstraction layers which manage to somehow erase decades of Moore's law because someone wanted to ship an entire browser for their desktop app or something, and which nobody actually understands.
gollark: Even the lowest level hardware stuff is vulnerable to weird exotic side channels, there's unauditable proprietary code running lots of stuff, and even outside of that people just cannot seem to write consistently secure code.
gollark: Actual implanted cybernetics are somewhat worrying because I don't really trust computers at this point, especially higher-performance ones.

References

  1. Joan Riley overview, Orlando.
  2. Wendy Rountree, "Joan Riley", The Literary Encyclopedia, 8 February 2005.
  3. "Joan Riley", in Pamela Mordecai (ed.), Her True-True Name, Heinemann, 1989, p. 66.
  4. "Joan Riley with Aamer Hussein", in Susheila Nasta (ed.), Writing Across Worlds: Contemporary Writers Talk, Routledge, 2004, p. 93.
  5. Mohit, Ed.; K. Ray (2007). The Atlantic Companion to Literature in English. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. p. 448. ISBN 81-269-0832-7.
  6. "Joan Riley Biography - (1958– ), The Unbelonging, Waiting in the Twilight, Romance, A Kindness to the Children". Jrank. Net Industries. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  7. Margaret Busby (ed.), Daughters of Africa, London: Jonathan Cape, 1992, pp. 909–14.


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