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Kit De Waal

We consider representation in stories, and the working class voice, with the best-selling author Kit De Waal.

After a career in criminal and family law, Kit De Waal started writing in her mid-40s and she was 51 when she finally went to university, completing an MA in Creative Writing.

My Name Is Leon, her debut novel, draws on Kit’s mixed race, working class background, as well as the insights she gained into adoption and the care system. After a six-way auction between publishers, Kit signed a lucrative book deal, and My Name Is Leon became an international bestseller in 2016.

Kit has just published her third novel, Becoming Dinah, her first foray into YA fiction and the debut for a new publishing imprint focused on female voices. It is a coming-of-age tale, and a re-imagining of the American classic Moby Dick, in which a female character comes to the fore.

Whilst her own story is of one of extraordinary success, Kit began to speak up about the lack of opportunity for working class writers and the need for a change in the stories appearing on bookshelves.

Kit also acted upon what she saw, setting up a creative writing scholarship for people from disadvantaged backgrounds, and compiling an anthology of working-class writers, titled Common People.

This episode features a short story recorded for Radio 4 in 2015, titled The Beautiful Thing, as well as a 2017 documentary which asks Where Are All The Working Class Writers?

Made for Radio 4 Extra.

1 hour

Last on

Wed 28 Oct 2020 04:00

Broadcasts

  • Tue 30 Jul 2019 11:00
  • Tue 30 Jul 2019 21:00
  • Tue 27 Oct 2020 11:00
  • Tue 27 Oct 2020 16:00
  • Tue 27 Oct 2020 21:00
  • Wed 28 Oct 2020 04:00