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Jeffrey Boakye News and Features


Jeffrey Boakye
Jeffrey Boakye is a writer, teacher and music enthusiast originally from Brixton, London. He has a particular interest in issues surrounding educa tion, race and popular culture. Jeffrey has taught English in London second ary schools and sixth-form colleges since 2007, previously working in jour nalism and copywriting, after graduating with a degree in English Literature.
His first book,
Hold Tight: Black Masculinity, Millennials and the Meaning of Grime, is recognised as one of the first seminal books about grime music, published by Influx Press in 2017.
Black, Listed: Black British Culture Explored is his second major book, published under Dialogue Books in 2018. He is also the co-author of ....

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Black writers and authors who are black


My last book,
Black, Listed: Black British Culture Explored, contains the word “black” a total of 1,750 times. In a manuscript of 99,000 words, that constitutes 1.8 per cent. Two of these are in the title alone. To put that into perspective, if you removed 1.8 per cent of the population of England and Wales who, according to the 2011 census, identify as black African, you’d be getting rid of every black African person in those countries within the UK.
My first book,
Hold Tight: Black Masculinity, Millennials And The Meaning Of Grime, was a “witty and perceptive, confident and charming” exploration of grime music (not my words, but who am I to argue with the critics?). The first page begins with the word “black” – “black music”, to be precise. The book also has the world “black” in its subtitle and features a whole chapter devoted to a song called “Black” and another about a song called “Black Boys” (I was once one of those too). ....

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Women's Prize for Fiction 2021: Two sets of twins among the pearls on shortlist


Bernardine Evaristo:
“The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett is a beautifully written novel, and psychologically very complex, and it looks into the consequences of racism and its effect on the human psyche, and how it can determine people’s lifestyle choices and relationships and shape their fate.”
The Vignes twin sisters will always be identical. But after growing up together in a small, southern black community and running away at age 16, it’s not just the shape of their daily lives that is different as adults, it’s everything: their families, their communities, their racial identities. Ten years later, one sister lives with her black daughter in the same southern town she once tried to escape. The other secretly passes for white, and her white husband knows nothing of her past. What will happen to the next generation, when their own daughters’ story lines intersect? ....

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New books by black and POC authors you need on your 2021 reading list


“There are hundreds of manuscripts I turn down, so everything goes into the books I am publishing as I believe that they above others deserve scores of readers. Finding unique voices that tell us more about the world we live in, wake us up from our privilege and expose the challenges individuals face is an honour, and one I am always delighted to share with curious readers.”
On Sharmaine’s TBR pile? Three dazzling new books from Dialogue, coming soon to a (virtual) shelf near you.
Cold Sun by Anita Sivakumaran (pub 1st April) | Available for pre-order 
“A fresh new voice in crime fiction, Anita Sivakumaran brings us a troubled and conflicted DI Vijay Patel trying to solve a big crime on a new beat. Three women are murdered, each draped in a red sari and the killer desperately needs to be caught. But Patel finds himself a stranger in his homeland, unable to grasp his bearings.” ....

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Introducing our 10 best debut novelists of 2021


Introducing our 10 best debut novelists of 2021
The Observer
It’s a tough time to be a debut novelist, with so many of the usual channels for promoting new writing suspended or curtailed. The
Observer’s pick of this year’s first novels will be published in a country whose bookshops are closed, and whose literary festivals have been postponed or made virtual. It therefore feels particularly important to celebrate these books, to make sure that they receive the profile and plaudits they deserve.
This is the eighth year in which the
New Review team has read through dozens of first novels, looking for books that leap out from the crowd, writers who speak with powerful, fresh voices. Our record is pretty good. Last year we were the first to champion Douglas Stuart’s ....

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