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Derek Owusu (born 1988) is a British writer and podcaster. He edited and contributed to the book Safe: On Black British Men Reclaiming Space (2019) and released his debut novel That Reminds Me in November 2019; the latter was awarded the 2020 Desmond Elliott Prize. Owusu was named on the Granta Best of Young British Novelists list 2023.


Life and work
Owusu, of Ghanaian heritage, was raised in by a white family in a village in until he was eight years old. In 1997 he moved from Suffolk to to live with his biological parents.

Owusu graduated with a Master of Arts (MA) in Creative Writing from a Brunel University London in 2022.

He is the former co-host of the literature podcast Mostly Lit.

Owusu edited the book Safe: On Black British Men Reclaiming Space (2019), an anthology of writing by 20 men. He has said that the idea was given to him by fellow writer , who with Elizabeth Uviebinené had compiled a book called Slay in Your Lane (2018) and suggested that something similar from a male perspective would be a good idea.Sinclair, Leah (26 June 2019), "Black Male Britons Reclaim Their Space In New Book", The Voice. It includes essays by , , , and others "Members' Book Group – Safe ed. by Derek Owusu", Royal Society of Literature, 12 November 2019. that are, as Alex Mistlin wrote in Vice, "addressing the conflicts and complexities of being a black man in Britain today". According to Mistlin, Safe is "about the multi-faceted nature of the black experience, how blackness intertwines with society, masculinity and sexuality to form a coherent identity that is at once universal and unique." Owusu contributes an essay about his experience of foster care.Biswas, K. (12 June 2019), "How black culture went mainstream", New Statesman.

Owusu began work on his debut novel after suffering a mental break down and having to spend time in a mental health facility. That Reminds Me (2019), a coming-of-age story about a young Ghanaian called "K", was the first novel from 's imprint #Merky Books, and was awarded the 2020 Desmond Elliott Prize.Flood, Alison (2 July 2020), "Merky author Derek Owusu wins Desmond Elliott prize for 'profound' debut", The Guardian.Wood, Heloise (18 July 2019), "Mostly Lit's Derek Owusu signs two-book deal with Stormzy imprint", . According to Metro, "there's nothing indulgent about this quietly observed account of a black man Owusu gives the name of K, who is struggling to make sense of a chaotic upbringing and of his place in a world not designed for people like him with a hidden mental health problem." , poetry critic for , picking That Reminds Me as her poetry book of the month for November, called it "brave and moving", also describing it as "semi-autobiographical", as both the protagonist and Owusu himself live with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder.Allfree, Claire (17 November 2019), "Book reviews: Thanks to Stormzy, here’s a poetic memoir of life as a black man", Metro. It was described by The Herald as a "virtuosic debut by a raw new talent".

Inspired by his mother's journey from Ghana to Britain in the 1980s, Owusu's second novel, Losing the Plot, was published in 2022. Calling it "difficult to classify", Lucy Popescu notes in the : "It combines a potent mix of fragmented prose and poetry, side notes peppered with slang and abundant white space....In this slender work, Owusu offers a biting glimpse of the immigrant experience relayed in a distinctive Ghanaian-British voice." also remarked on the book's "category-confounding form", while the reviewer for The Irish Times wrote: "The narrative structure is elastic and malleable in Owusu’s skilled hands as he navigates and positions himself quite literally on the margins, while giving centre stage to his mother's story.... Losing the Plot is a masterclass in distilled writing and a stirring ode to motherhood." According to : "This novel is a reflection of a son attempting to embrace the entirety of his mother – all her vulnerability, spikiness and unknowability. And Owusu does so with extraordinary compassion. The empathy with which Owusu writes of the mother’s battles and battle weariness is remarkably perceptive; he observes and captures her fragility with apposite delicateness, never with grandiosity."

In 2023, he was named on the Granta Best of Young British Novelists list, compiled every 10 years since 1983, identifying the 20 most significant British novelists aged under 40.


Publications

Fiction


As editor


External links

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