Barbara Trapido
Barbara Trapido | |
---|---|
Born | Barbara Schuddeboom 1941 (age 82–83) Cape Town, South Africa |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | British |
Education | University of Natal (BA) |
Barbara (Louise) Trapido (born 1941 as Barbara Schuddeboom), is a British novelist born in South Africa with German, Danish and Dutch ancestry.[1] Born in Cape Town and growing up in Durban she studied at the University of Natal gaining a BA in 1963 before emigrating to London. After many years teaching, she became a full-time writer in 1970.[2]
Trapido has published seven novels, three of which have been nominated for the Whitbread Prize. Her semi-autobiographical Frankie & Stankie, one of those shortlisted, which deals with growing up white under apartheid, gained a great deal of critical attention, most of it favourable. It was also longlisted for the Booker prize.
Barbara Trapido lives with her family in Oxford and some of her books have Oxford connections.
Bibliography
[edit]- Brother of the More Famous Jack (1982)
- Noah's Ark (1984)
- Temples of Delight (1990)
- Juggling (1994)
- The Travelling Hornplayer (1998)
- Frankie & Stankie (2003)
- Sex & Stravinsky (2010)
Reviews
[edit]- Frankie & Stankie, Observer newspaper
- Frankie & Stankie, Telegraph newspaper
- Sex & Stravinsky, The Independent newspaper
External links
[edit]- Barbara Trapido: Biography and critical perspective from the British Council.
- "The awkward squad". Trapido writes in The Guardian newspaper about the process of creating a novel.
References
[edit]- ^ Cosic, Miriam (12 June 2010). "The parallel worlds of Barbara Trapido". The Australian. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
Her mother was a shy woman, half-German and half-Danish, who had come from Berlin ... Trapido's father ... grew up in The Hague
- ^ Barbara Trapido Archived October 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- 1941 births
- Living people
- Writers from Cape Town
- 20th-century British novelists
- 21st-century British novelists
- South African women novelists
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- Writers from Oxford
- University of Natal alumni
- British people of German descent
- South African emigrants to the United Kingdom
- British people of Danish descent
- British people of Dutch descent
- 21st-century British women writers
- 20th-century British women writers