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Rochelle D Spiker's avatar

Knocked my socks off when I read it back in the day. I was an avid David Bowie fan and your references to him were enlightening! Passages from the book still stand out for me in my mind. I am going to re-read it and it will be a pleasure I am certain. Coping with being an older person ,I remember how I saw Bowie live in concert 6 times, he was Warm, funny, sexy, brilliant. Now he is a statue, a mural, a recording. Mortality defines us all.

Blessings as always to you, Hanif!

Rochelle

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Piere Jamal's avatar

Hope you are recovering and feeling better.

I think you were the first writer in our generation to recognise Britain's social structures had completely changed post WW2 with the ending of Empire. You were also very funny , and yet there was poignancy. I wish I could find a script of your very first radio play...in that hot summer of 1976? I first heard of you when a friend told me there was a play I would like at Jackson's Lane Community Centre...Borderline...1981/82 ish...from memory...I think that's right. I then saw Birds of Passage at Hampstead Theatre. I went three times. Then Mother Courage at the Barbican. I then read your scripts like Outskirts. It was just great to have this "voice" out there as we went about our lives. Then the whole Laundrette thing happened. ..and then Buddha and the rest. These chronicles are unique because you seem to be opening up on so many internal processes about all that body of writing, and connecting with readers. Keep going...keep getting better.

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