Birth Place: | Trinidad and Tobago |
Occupation: | Writer, artist and academic |
Notable Works: | Love After Love (2020) |
Awards: | Commonwealth Short Story Prize |
Alma Mater: | London School of Economics |
Ingrid Persaud is a Trinidad and Tobago-born writer, artist, and academic, who lives in the United Kingdom. She won the BBC National Short Story Award in 2018, and the Commonwealth Short Story Prize in 2017, with her debut effort The Sweet Sop.[1] [2] The story is about an estranged father and son reunited through their shared love for chocolate.[3]
In 2020, Persaud's novel Love After Love, was published by Faber & Faber in the UK and One World/Random House in the USA.[4] Love After Love won the Costa Book Award for First Novel in 2020.[5] She has written for the magazines Granta, Prospect and Pree, as well as for The Guardian and the I newspapers.[6] [7]
Persaud read law at the London School of Economics,[8] and studied fine art at Goldsmith College and Central Saint Martins.[9] Persaud taught law at King's College London, and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and worked as a visual artist and project manager before becoming a writer.[10] [11]
Persaud began writing in her 40s, after a successful career as a legal academic and visual artist.
She has also written for National Geographic.[12]
The story, set in modern-day Trinidad, centres the Ramdin-Chetan family, told from three separate perspectives: Betty Ramdin, her son Solo, and their lodger Mr Chetan. These characters form an unconventional household full of love and affection until the night when a glass of rum, a heart to heart and a terrible truth explodes the family unit, driving them apart. The novel asks us to consider what happens at the very brink of human forgiveness, and offers hope to anyone who has loved and lost and has yet to find their way back.[13]
The book examines love in many iterations and also highlights the treatment of gay people in the Caribbean, the fragility of life as an undocumented migrant in the United States, as well as traditional religious beliefs contrasted with unconventional spirituality.[14]
Persaud's debut novel received critical acclaim including from The Guardian
The title of Persaud's novel refers to a poem of the same name by Caribbean author and poet Derek Walcott.
Persaud left Trinidad at 18 and moved to the UK to study. She has lived at various times in Boston and Barbados. She has identical twin sons.[16]