Alex Wheatle Explained

Alex Wheatle
Honorific Suffix:MBE
Birth Date:3 January 1963
Birth Place:London, United Kingdom
Birth Name:Alex Alphonso Wheatle
Alma Mater:Shirley Oaks Children's Home
Pseudonym:The Brixton Bard
Occupation:Novelist
Movement:Black British literature
Children:3
Language:English
Notable Works:Brixton Rock (1999)
Crongton Knights (2016)
Cane Warriors (2020)
Awards:Guardian Children's Fiction Prize

Alex Alphonso Wheatle MBE (born 3 January 1963)[1] is a British novelist, who was sentenced to a term of imprisonment after the 1981 Brixton riot in London.[2]

Biography

Born in 1963 in London[3] to Jamaican parents,[4] Wheatle spent much of his childhood in a Shirley Oaks Children's Home. At the age of 16, he was a founding member of the Crucial Rocker sound system; his DJ name was Yardman Irie. He wrote lyrics about everyday life in Brixton, south London. By 1980, Wheatle was living in a social services hostel in Brixton, and he participated in the 1981 Brixton riots and their aftermath. While serving his resulting sentence, he read authors such as Chester Himes, Richard Wright, C. L. R. James and John Steinbeck. Wheatle's cellmate, a Rastafari, was the one who encouraged Wheatle to start reading books and care about his education.[5] He features aspects of his life in his books, such as East of Acre Lane characters Yardman Irie and Jah Nelson.

Wheatle has since spoken about the Brixton riots, most prominently in the 2006 BBC programme Battle for Brixton.[6] His early books are based on his life in Brixton as a teenager and his time in social services' care.[7]

He received the London Arts Board New Writers Award in 1999 for his debut novel Brixton Rock,[8] which was later adapted for the stage and performed at the Young Vic in July 2010.[9]

He wrote and performed Uprising, a one-man play based on his own life at Tara Arts Studios, Wandsworth, London. In 2011, he took Uprising on tour and performed it at the Writing On The Wall Festival, Liverpool, the Oxford Playhouse, the Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury, the Ilkley Playhouse and the Albany Theatre, Deptford. The play re-toured theatres and literature festivals in 2012, marking the 50th year of Jamaican Independence.[10]

Wheatle lives in London. He is a member of English PEN, and he now visits various institutions facilitating creative writing classes and making speeches. He has also narrated an audio guide to the streets of Brixton.[11]

Awards and honours

In the Queen's Birthday Honours 2008, Wheatle was awarded the MBE for services to literature.[12]

His young-adult novel Liccle Bit was longlisted for the Carnegie Medal in 2016.

His 2016 book Crongton Knights won the 50th Guardian Children's Fiction Prize. S. F. Said, one of the judging panel, said of the book: "Wheatle's writing is poetic, rhythmic and unique, remaking the English language with tremendous verve. Though Crongton is his invention, it resonates with many urban situations, not only in Britain but around the world. Crongton Knights is a major novel from a major voice in British children's literature."[13] [14]

Wheatle's life story features in Alex Wheatle, the fourth film in Small Axe, a 2020 anthology of five films by Steve McQueen about the West Indian community in the UK during the 1970s and 1980s. Alex Wheatle depicts Wheatle's life up to and just after the Brixton uprising.[15] [16] [17]

In March 2024 the Arbeitskreis für Jugendliteratur, the German national section of IBBY, nominated Cane Warriors in the category Jugendbuch for the 2024 Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis.

Bibliography

Wheatle's books have also been translated into French, Italian, Urdu, Welsh, German, and Japanese.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020-12-08. About. alexwheatle.com.
  2. News: Wheatle . Alex . I felt so alone and rejected – until my prison cellmate taught me about belonging . 29 December 2021 . The Guardian . London, United Kingdom . 0261-3077 . 2021-12-29.
  3. Web site: Alex Wheatle. British Council. 7 December 2020.
  4. Web site: Alex Wheatle . The Susijn Agency.
  5. News: Khaleeli . Homa . Alex Wheatle: 'I felt like the token black writer who talks about ghetto stuff' . 19 November 2016 . The Guardian (Review section). London. 15. 23 November 2016 .
  6. Web site: 10 April 2008 . Opposite sides of Brixton's front line . . BBC News.
  7. Web site: Alex Wheatle . dead . https://archive.today/20120914014501/http://www.myvillage.com/london/articles/20679-alex-wheatle/ . 14 September 2012 . Interview with Myvillage.
  8. Web site: Alex Wheatle - Biography . British Council, Contemporary Writers.
  9. Web site: Brixton Rock . 12 August 2010 . Talawa Theatre Company.
  10. Web site: Touring Literature Festivals & Theatres in 2012 marking the 50th year of Jamaican Independence. Uprising (2011 & 2012). 9 December 2020.
  11. Web site: London – Brixton with Novelist Alex Wheatle. GuidiGo. 9 December 2020.
  12. Web site: Birthday Honours List 2008 . 11 August 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080723004904/http://www.honours.gov.uk/lists/2008birthday.aspx . 23 July 2008 . dead .
  13. News: Claire. Armitstead. Alex Wheatle wins 2016 Guardian children's fiction prize. The Guardian. 17 November 2016. 23 November 2016 .
  14. Web site: 18 November 2016 . Wheatle wins Guardian Children's Fiction Prize . The Bookseller.
  15. News: Alex Wheatle: 'I have nightmarish moments where my past comes back and hits me'. Jimi. Famurewa. The Guardian. 5 December 2020.
  16. Web site: Small Axe: Alex Wheatle (TV). FilmAffinity. 22 November 2020.
  17. News: Small Axe: Alex Wheatle — a hymn to south London's West Indian links. Danny. Leigh. Financial Times. 2 December 2020.