Gabriel Gbadamosi is an Irish-Nigerian poet, playwright and essayist born in London. He was AHRC Creative and Performing Arts Fellow at the Pinter Centre, Goldsmiths, and a Judith E. Wilson Fellow for creative writing at Cambridge University. His plays include Shango, Hotel Orpheu and for radio The Long, Hot Summer of ’76 (BBC Radio 3), which won the Richard Imison Award. He has presented Night Waves on BBC Radio 3 and Art Beat on the World Service. Vauxhall is his first novel.
www.gabrielgbadamosi.com
‘Only a poet could have written Vauxhall. I can hear Yeats and Joyce in it ... Gbadamosi paints a vivid portrait of 1970s multicultural London, giving that time in our recent history its own music, voice and clear light. Vauxhall is written in the way that English should be written – clean, swift and with flashes of lightning.’
Bonnie Greer, author of Hanging by her Teeth
‘A tenderly observed, fascinating portrait of a childhood in South London, as it moves from post-war darkness into an uncertain new era.’
Blake Morrison, author of South of the River
‘Immediately appealing, this is a quite an odyssey through the maelstrom that London was in the 1970s. A remarkable achievement.’
Brian Chikwava, author of Harare North
‘An impressive feat of memory and skill ... the streets, the fraught encounters, the sense of family and growing understandings of youth are winningly brought to life in a series of deft, artful vignettes.’
Diran Adebayo, author of Some Kind of Black