Andrea Levy is a child of the Windrush. She is the daughter
of one of the pioneers who sailed from Jamaica to England
on the Empire Windrush ship. Her father and later her mother
came to Britain in 1948 in search of a better life. For
the British born Levy this meant that she grew up black
in a very white England. This experience has given her an
unusual perspective on the country of her birth - neither
feeling totally part of the society nor a total outsider.
Andrea Levy did not begin writing until she was in her
mid-thirties. At that time there was little written about
the black British experience in Britian. After attending
writing workshops Levy began to write the novels that she,
as a young woman, had always wanted to read. In her first
three novels she explored - from different perspectives
- the problems faced by black British born children of Jamaican
emigrants. In her first novel, the semi-autobiographical
Every Light in the House Burnin' (1994), the story is of
a Jamaican family living in London in the 1960s. Never Far
from Nowhere (1996), her second, is set during the 1970s
and tells the story of two very different sisters living
on a London council estate. In Fruit of the Lemon (1999),
Faith Jackson, a young black woman, visits Jamaica after
suffering a nervous breakdown and discovers a previously
unknown personal history.
Andrea Levy is a Londoner. She not only lives and works
in the city she loves but has used London as the setting
in all her novels. She has been a recipient of an Arts Council
Award and her second novel Never Far from Nowhere was long
listed for the Orange Prize. Besides novels she has also
written short stories that have been read on radio, published
in newspapers and anthologised. She has been a judge for
the Orange Prize for Fiction, Orange Futures and the Saga
Prize.
Small Island is the winner of Orange Prize for Fiction,
the Whitbread Novel Award and the Commonwealth Writer's
Prize.