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Jamila Gavin

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Name
  
Jamila Gavin


Role
  
Writer

Jamila Gavin httpswwwhachettechildrenscoukassetsHachett

Education
  
Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance

Nominations
  
Books
  
Coram Boy, Grandpa Chatterji, The Wheel of Surya, The Blood Stone, Out of India

GOP TV: Why Write? ft. Jamila Gavin


Jamila Gavin FRSL (born 9 August 1941) is a British writer born in Mussoorie in the United Provinces of India, in the present-day state of Uttarakhand in the Western Himalayas. She is known primarily for children's books, including several with Indian origins.

Contents

Jamila Gavin Jamila Gavin HOME

Jamila gavin beverley naidoo and elizabeth laird


Life

Jamila Gavin Wanted children39s books with South Asian characters

Gavin was born on 9 August 1941 in Mussoorie in the foothills of the Himalayas. Her father was Indian and her mother English; they met as teachers in Iran. She learned to describe herself as "half and half". She says online that from her mixed background "I inherited two rich cultures which ran side by side throughout my life, and which always made me feel I belonged to both countries."

Jamila Gavin httpsliteraturebritishcouncilorgassetsUploa

She first visited England when she was six, and settled there when she was 11. She worked in the music department of the BBC before becoming a writer.

Jamila Gavin Jamila Gavins Cotswold Life Celebrity interviews entertainment

She wrote her first book, The Magic Orange Tree and Other Stories, in 1979. After her first child was born, she became aware that there were few children's books reflecting their experience as multi-racial children. She has also written books reflecting her childhood in India, particularly her Surya trilogy.

She is also a patron of the Shakespeare Schools Festival, a charity that enables schoolchildren across the UK to perform Shakespeare in professional theatres.

Gavin settled in Stroud, Gloucestershire before 1990 and was still living there in 2009 and in 2012.

In 2016, Gavin was one of the founders of Stroud Book Festival, together with Cindy Jefferies.

Her son, the novelist Rohan Gavin, married Dido, a singer-songwriter.

Writer

The Surya trilogy (1992 to 1997) is a family saga following two generations of Indian Sikhs and showing the impact of the British Empire and the Partition of India on their lives. The three volumes are The Wheel of Surya (1992), The Eye of the Horse (1994) and The Track of the Wind (1997). All three books made the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize shortlist and The Wheel of Surya was special runner-up.

Coram Boy won the 2000 Whitbread Prize as Children's Book of the Year. It is set in the 18th century, based on the Foundling Hospital established in London by sea Captain Thomas Coram. According to a local newspaper, the story "has links to Gloucestershire." Coram Boy has been adapted for the stage by Helen Edmundson and produced by the Royal National Theatre in 2005–2006 - garnering Edmundson an Olivier Award - as well on Broadway in 2007.

Three Indian Goddesses and Three Indian Princesses are collections of short stories based around Indian legends. Nine short stories were collected as The Magic Orange Tree and Other Stories.

Grandpa Chatterji is a series for younger children, named for its first book, which was adapted for television in 1997. Other books in the series are Grandpa Chatterji's Third Eye and Grandpa's Indian Summer. The first book made the Smarties Prize shortlist for reader ages 6–8.

Jamila Gavin also wrote The Robber Baron's Daughter, Forbidden Memories, I Want to be An Angel, Kamla and Kate, Someone's Watching, Someone's Waiting, The Hideaway and The Wormholers.

Awards and honours

On 15 July 2014, she was announced as a finalist for the Neustadt Prize for Children's Literature.

She became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2015.

Short listed for Richard Imison Memorial Award in 2001

2000, Winner of Whitbread Children's Book Award (Costa Book Awards,)

1997, Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, Shortlist

1994, Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, Shortlist

1992, Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, Shortlist

References

Jamila Gavin Wikipedia