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Book Cover for: That Reminds Me, Derek Owusu

That Reminds Me

Derek Owusu

Critic Reviews

Great

Based on 3 reviews on

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This is the story of K. If you
believe your life to be as fictitious as K's, if you find yourself within the
pages of this book, then you are holding the pen and not me.

Attachments
are broken at birth. Shards slide apart. K: a child put into foster care, a boy
brought back to the city, a man who must fight to make sense of his past. Is
there hope to be found in a broken mind? Can the pieces of a life come together
to reveal an image that's steady? Episodic, fragmented, full of poetry's coiled
power, That Reminds Me is the story
of one young man remembering. It's an entreaty to a lost culture, and a fight
for love, for family, and for the respite of fixed identity. And
in its searing and delicate questionings--of belonging, addiction, sexuality,
violence, mental health, and religion--That
Reminds Me
firmly places Derek Owusu amongst the brightest British writers
of today.

Book Details

  • Publisher: And Other Stories
  • Publish Date: Jun 27th, 2023
  • Pages: 120
  • Language: English
  • Dimensions: 7.80in - 5.00in - 0.70in - 0.30lb
  • EAN: 9781913505554
  • Categories: World Literature - England - 21st CenturyOwn VoicesLiterary

About the Author

Derek Owusu is a writer, poet and podcaster from north London. He discovered his passion for literature at the age of twenty-three while studying exercise science at university. Unable to afford a change of degree, Derek began reading voraciously and sneaking into English Literature lectures at the University of Manchester. Derek edited and contributed to Safe: On Black British Men Reclaiming Space. That Reminds Me, his first novel, won the 2020 Desmond Elliott Prize

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

"That Reminds Me is the story of a young child growing into
adulthood while negotiating the impossibly difficult circumstances of émigré
life compounded by foster care, poverty, racism and varieties of cultural
difference. Derek Owusu tell this story with extraordinary insight and
emotional subtlety, almost inventing a new literary form as he takes you into
this child/man's experience on an intimate, nearly cellular level. To
call it moving is an understatement." --Mary Gaitskill

Owusu is
writer of jaw-dropping talent and That
Reminds Me will break over you like a storm, seething with wonder,
wisdom, lightning, terrors and so much heartbreaking beauty. Simply
glorious." --Junot Díaz

"A dreamy, impressionistic offering of reassembled fragments of memories emerging through the misty beauty of a deliciously individualistic poetic sensibility with flashes of Twi and UK London Ebonics to further remind us of what has been missing from British poetry . . . I can't tell you how impressed I was and how much I enjoyed reading this stunning book." --Bernardine Evaristo

"That Reminds Me is a profoundly moving book about Black bodies and identity, and about God, sex, family, art, love, and madness. It is somehow both tender and unflinching, and the prose has both the lyricism of verse and the direct simplicity of overheard speech. Derek Owusu has made a vital contribution to our culture, and it should be widely read." --Sarah Perry

"When writing is this honest, it soars. I think that this is why the words in this collection fly around you and settle, as they have. What an incredible use of language and truth." --Yrsa Daley-Ward

"Honest, insightful, and woven together in a narrative that will undoubtedly change lives." --DeRay Mckesson

"These are words that come from the heart, the lived life and owned observations. Powerful and moving. Social realism at its best." --Alex Wheatle

"That Reminds Me reads like an open wound. The prose runs like a pulse, builds like the beat of some lowercase drum. Honest and beautiful." --Guy Gunaratne

"A fast-paced, dense, poetic, original, and bewitching story by an important new writer. That Reminds Me will long be remembered by readers." --Alain Mabanckou

"A magnificent achievement." --Paul Gilroy

"A singular achievement." --Michael Donkor, The Guardian