Nicolas Padamsee: An Observer Best Debut Novelist for 2024
Tuesday 21st May
Topping & Company Booksellers of Edinburgh, 2 Blenheim Place, Edinburgh EH7 5JH
7.10pm
7.30pm
Nicolas Padamsee's England is Mine is an explosive novel about one of Britain's most pressing issues: violent extremism amongst young men. Nicolas was named by The Observer as one of 2024's most exciting debut novelists - and with good reason. England is Mine is a rocket of a book: brimming with love, violence, sympathy, hate. It is a manifesto for empathy and cross-community understanding in a time of alarming polarisation.
If you love Moshin Hamid, Kamila Shamsie, Patricia Lockwood, or Hannah Bervoets, England is Mine is not to be missed. Don't believe us? Join Nicolas at the bookshop this Spring to hear all about it.
England is Mine
David hates school, where he has been bullied, and has reached sixth form without any friends. Music is the only thing that keeps him going. Inspired by his hero, Karl Williams, he becomes vegan, wears eyeliner and writes song lyrics. But one night onstage Karl Williams accuses Muslims of homophobia and is cancelled. Conflicted by his feelings for his favourite artist and compelled by the conversations he has while playing Call of Duty, David becomes more and more fascinated by the far right's narratives of masculinity in conflict with liberal society.
Living in the same East London borough as David, Hassan has his own problems. He is drifting apart from his childhood friends, Mo and Ibrahim, who drink, blaze skunk and mock him for hanging out at the Muslim youth centre, where he is older than everyone else. Determined to make something of himself, he volunteers for his local mosque and works hard to try to get the grades he needs to go to university. As these second-generation immigrants struggle for a sense of identity and belonging - amid a wave of online radicalisation and extremism - their fates become inextricably, catastrophically entwined.
About Nicolas Padamsee
Nicolas Padamsee grew up in Essex. He holds a Creative Writing MA and a Creative & Critical Writing PhD from the University of East Anglia, and is the editor of Arts Against Extremism, which promotes literature as a means of investigating, understanding and countering extremism. He splits his time between Norwich and Upton Park, London.