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Jacqueline Margaret Kay (born 9 November 1961) is a Scottish poet, playwright, and novelist, known for her works Other Lovers (1993), Trumpet (1998) and Red Dust Road (2011). Kay has won many awards, including the Somerset Maugham Award in 1994, the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1998 and the Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust Book of the Year Award in 2011.

From 2016 to 2021, Jackie Kay was the Makar, the of . She was Chancellor of the University of Salford between 2015 and 2022.


Early life and education
Jackie Kay was born in , Scotland, in 1961, to a Scottish mother and a father. She was as a baby by a white Scottish couple, Helen and John Kay, and grew up in , a suburb of . They adopted Jackie in 1961, having already adopted her brother, Maxwell, about two years earlier. Jackie also has siblings who were brought up by her biological parents.

Her adoptive father worked for the Communist Party full-time and stood for Member of Parliament,Jackie Kay, "My old man: a voyage around our fathers", The Observer, 15 June 2008. and her adoptive mother was the Scottish secretary of Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. As a child, Kay suffered from children and teachers at school. John Kay died in 2019 at the age of 94. Helen Kay died in 2021 Jackie Kay on Twitter, February 15, 2021. at age 90.

As a teenager she worked as a cleaner, working for David Cornwell—who wrote under the pen-name John le Carré—for four months. She recommended cleaning work to aspiring writers, saying: "It's great ... You're listening to everything. You can be a spy, but nobody thinks you're taking anything in." Cornwell and Kay met again in 2019; he remembered her and had been following her.

In August 2007, Kay was featured in the fourth episode of the BBC Radio 4 series The House I Grew Up In, in which she talked about her childhood.


Career
Initially thinking of being an actor, she decided to concentrate on writing after , a Scottish artist and writer, read her poetry and told her that writing was what she should be doing. She studied English at the University of Stirling and her first book of poetry, the partially autobiographical, The Adoption Papers, was published in 1991 and won the Scottish First Book Award and a Scottish Arts Council Book Award in 1992. It is a multiple voiced collection of poetry that deals with identity, race, nationality, , and from the perspectives of three women: an adopted biracial child, her adoptive mother, and her biological mother. Her other prizes include the 1994 Somerset Maugham Award for Other Lovers, and the Guardian Fiction Prize for Trumpet, inspired by the life of American jazz musician , a transgender man.

In 1997, Kay published a biography of blues singer ; it was reissued in 2021. An abridged version read by the author featured as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week in the last week of February 2021.

Kay writes extensively for stage (in 1988 her play Twice Over was the first by a Black writer to be produced by Gay Sweatshop Theatre Group), "Gay Sweatshop Theatre Company", Unfinished Histories – Recording the History of Alternative Theatre. screen and for children. Her drama The Lamplighter is an exploration of the Atlantic slave trade. It was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in March 2007, produced by Pam Fraser Solomon, during a season marking the bicentenary of the Slave Trade Act 1807, and was published in printed form as a poem in 2008.Bloodaxe Books, 2008; .

In 2010 Kay published Red Dust Road, an account of her search for her biological parents, who had met each other when her father was a student at Aberdeen University and her mother was a nurse. The book was adapted for the stage by and premiered in August 2019 at the Edinburgh International Festival in a production by National Theatre of Scotland and HOME, at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh. Comparisons have been drawn between this work and Looking for Transwonderland by .

She is currently Professor of Creative Writing at Newcastle University, and Cultural Fellow at Glasgow Caledonian University. Kay lives in . She took part in the 's 2011 project , her piece being based on the book of from the King James Bible. "Jackie Kay – Hadassah in response to Esther" , Sixty-Six Books, Bush Theatre. In October 2014, it was announced that she had been appointed as the Chancellor of the University of Salford, and that she would be the university's "Writer in Residence" from 1 January 2015. "Appointment of new Chancellor", University of Salford, Greater Manchester, 17 October 2014.

In March 2016, Kay was announced as the next Scots Makar (national poet of Scotland), succeeding , whose tenure ended in January 2016.

She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2006 Birthday Honours for services to literature, and Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2020 New Year Honours, again for services to literature. Kay was on the list of the BBC's 100 Women announced on 23 November 2020.

In September 2024, it was announced that the National Library of Scotland had acquired Kay's literary archive.

In June of 2025, Kay will lead the Salford Literacy Symposium at the University of Salford. It is the inaugural conference with the purpose of engaging more young readers. The conference is part of the larger National Literacy Trust's campaign to increase literacy rates throughout Salford.


Personal life
Kay is a . In her twenties she gave birth to a son, Matthew (whose father is the writer Fred D'Aguiar), and later she had a 15-year relationship with poet Carol Ann Duffy. During this relationship, Duffy had a daughter, Ella, whose biological father is fellow poet Peter Benson.Preston, John, "Carol Ann Duffy interview", The Telegraph, 11 May 2010.


Awards and honours
  • 1991: Eric Gregory Award
  • 1992: Scottish First Book of the Year, The Adoption Papers
  • 1994: Somerset Maugham Award, Other Lovers
  • 1998: Guardian Fiction Prize, Trumpet
  • 2000: International Dublin Literary Award (shortlist), Trumpet
  • 2002: Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
  • 2003: Cholmondeley Award
  • 2006: MBE, Services to Literature
  • 2007: British Book Awards deciBel Writer of the Year
  • 2009: Scottish Book of the Year (shortlist), The Lamplighter
  • 2011: Scottish Book of the Year (shortlist), Fiere
  • 2011: Costa Book Awards (shortlist), Fiere
  • 2011: PEN/Ackerley Prize (shortlist), Red Dust Road
  • 2011: Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust Book of the Year Award (Non-Fiction category), Red Dust Road
  • 2016: Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
  • 2016: The Scots Makar
  • 2020: CBE, Services to Literature


Selected works
  • The Adoption Papers, , 1991, (poetry)
  • Other Lovers, Bloodaxe Books, 1993, (poetry)
  • Off Colour, Bloodaxe Books, 1998, (poetry)
  • Trumpet (fiction – 1998); Random House Digital, Inc., 2011,
  • The Frog who Dreamed she was an Opera Singer, Bloomsbury Children's Books, 1998,
  • Two's Company, Puffin Books, 1994,
  • Bessie Smith (biography – 1997), Faber & Faber, 2021,
  • Why Don't You Stop Talking (fiction – 2002); Pan Macmillan, 2012,
  • Strawgirl, Macmillan Children's, 2002,
  • Life Mask, Bloodaxe Books, 2005, (poetry)
  • Wish I Was Here (fiction – 2006); Pan Macmillan, 2012,
  • , Bloodaxe Books, 2007, (poetry)
  • The Lamplighter, Bloodaxe Books, 2008, (poetry/radio play)
  • Red, Cherry Red, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2007,
  • Maw Broon Monologues (2009) (shortlisted for the Award for New Work in Poetry)
  • (2025). 9781935633358, Atlas and Company. .
    (memoir)
  • Fiere, Pan Macmillan, 2011, (poetry)
  • Reality, Reality, Pan Macmillan, 2012,
  • The Empathetic Store, Mariscat Press, 2015, (poetry)
  • Bantam, Pan Macmillan, 2017, (poetry)
  • "The Writing Life", in The Women Writers Handbook, Aurora Metro Books, 2020,
  • May Day, Picador, 2024, (poetry)

Some other poetry used in Edexcel Syllabus

  • "Brendon Gallacher"
  • "Lucozade"
  • "Yellow"


See also
  • Twice Through the Heart – opera with libretto by Kay.


External links

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