Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Roopa Farooki

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Residence
  
London, England

Occupation
  
Writer

Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Roopa Farooki

Ethnicity
  
Bengali, Punjabi

Role
  
Novelist

Alma mater
  


Born
  
Notable work
  
Bitter SweetsCorner ShopThe Way Things Look to MeHalf LifeThe Flying ManThe Good Children

Parents
  
Nilofar Farooki, Nasim Ahmed Farooki

Education
  
University of Oxford, New College, Oxford

Books
  
The Flying Man, Half Life, The Way Things Look to Me, Corner Shop, Bitter Sweets

The flying man researching the novel roopa farooki


Roopa Farooki is a British novelist. Born in Lahore, Pakistan, to a Pakistani father and Bangladeshi mother in 1974, they moved to London when she was seven months old. Roopa studied PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics) at New College, Oxford University, worked in Corporate Finance (at Arthur Andersen) and then as an Advertising Account Director (at Saatchi & Saatchi and JWT), before she turned to writing fiction full-time.

Contents

Roopa Farooki Roopa Farooki I didnt eat or sleep while writing new novel Half

Roopa Farooki - Research for her novel The Flying Man


Novels

Roopa Farooki Bitter Sweets Roopa Farooki Macmillan

She wrote her first novel, Bitter Sweets, while pregnant with her first child, and renovating a house in SW France. Bitter Sweets was first published in the UK in 2007, and shortlisted for the Orange Award for New Writers that year. She published her second novel, Corner Shop, in 2008. Her third novel, The Way Things Look To Me, was published in 2009, and was voted one of The Times Top 50 Paperbacks of 2009, long-listed for the Orange Prize 2010, and has been long-listed for the Impac Dublin Literary Award 2011. Her fourth novel, Half Life, was published in 2010, and was selected by Entertainment Weekly (US) as No. 2 on their list of "Eighteen Books We Can't Wait to Read This Summer"; it was also nominated for the International Muslim Writers Awards 2011. Her fifth novel, The Flying Man was published in January 2012 in the UK, and has been longlisted for the Orange Prize 2012. Her sixth novel, "The Good Children" was named by the Daily Mail as "the outstanding novel of the year" in the newspaper's 2014 books of the year round-up.

Farooki's novels have been published in English internationally (in the US and Canada, UK, Australia, India, Singapore) and in translation in a dozen languages across Europe.

Personal life

Roopa Farooki is the daughter of the late Nasir Ahmad Farooki, a Pakistani novelist and a prominent figure in Pakistani literary circles in the 1960s. Roopa's father abandoned her when she was 13, later marrying a Chinese American. Her mother, Nilofar, later had a long term relationship with an English-Iraqi of Jewish descent. Despite being of both Pakistani and Bangladeshi descent, she speaks only English because her parents were keen on assimilating into London and spoke to her in only English.

Farooki cites her father as an inspiration, and has written frankly about her relationship with her father and his influence on her work in the UK national press. She has also written about her experiences of eczema, relationship counselling, and fertility treatment. Her recent novels have featured characters with Asperger's Syndrome, and Bipolar Disorder.

She currently lives in southwest France and southeast England with her Anglo-Irish husband, two sons, and twin daughters, and teaches creative writing. She has been a lecturer on the Masters programme in Prose Fiction at Canterbury Christchurch University and an undergraduate lecturer at the University of Kent in England. She currently teaches on the Masters programme at the University of Oxford. She is also the Ambassador for the UK relationship counselling charity, Relate.

Acceptance

Farooki's novels have been critically well received, and she has been compared to other British female novelists, Andrea Levy, Zadie Smith and Monica Ali. In an interview with the Metro in 2010, headlined, "Nationality is Not The Issue", she said she was flattered by the comparisons, but said that a key difference was that she had made a deliberate decision not to focus on cultural clash in her novels, and to write universal stories.

References

Roopa Farooki Wikipedia


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