Blake Friedmann

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Monique Roffey on Orange Prize shortlist

April 19, 2010

THE WHITE WOMAN ON THE GREEN BICYCLE, Monique Roffey's 'passionate and true' portrayal of contemporary Trinidad has been named on the shortlist for the 2010 Orange Prize for Fiction. The shortlist of six also features Rosie Alison, Barbara Kingsolver, Attica Locke, Hilary Mantel and Lorrie Moore. Previous winners of the prize include Zadie Smith, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Carol Shields.


Chair of judges Daisy Goodwin said: 'This shortlist achieves the near impossible of combining literary merit with sheer readability. With a thriller, historical novels that reflect our world back to us, as well as a tragicomedy about post-9/11 America - there is something here to challenge, amuse and enthrall every kind of reader.' 

 

The Orange Prize, first awarded in 1996, is the only British literary prize which focuses exclusively on novels written by women. The winner will be announced at the award ceremony on June 9th. For more information about the prize as well as the novel's entry on the Orange Prize's website, click here.
 
THE WHITE WOMAN ON THE GREEN BICYCLE has been published in the UK (Simon and Schuster, 2009) and in Australia (Penguin, 2009), with the UK paperback available now. Suzanne Berne, a previous winner of the Orange Prize, describes Monique Roffey's novel as "vibrant, provocative, satisfying", her Trinidad "so beautifully and lushly evoked that while I was reading Trinidad became more real for me than my own neighbourhood." Another of Roffey's fans, Booker Prize nominee Sarah Hall, has said, "Monique Roffey is a writer of verve, vibrancy and compassion, and her work is always a joy to read."

 

More Praise for THE WHITE WOMAN ON THE GREEN BICYCLE:

 

'Vibrant and vivid; passionate and true. This is a powerful tropical mix; a compassionate book that needed to be written.'
-- Amanda Smyth, author of BLACK ROCK
 
'Compelling and original. A bruised, sensuous love-letter to Trinidad which grippingly unfolds the violent aftermath of colonial rule and also speaks fearlessly of love and hatred across the lines of 'race' and class.'
-- Maggie Gee
 
'Monique Roffey's story of contemporary Trinidad seen through European eyes breaks entirely new ground. It is a major contribution to the new wave of Caribbean writing: energetic, uncompromising, bold in the choice of narrative devices, and a great read. Roffey is a magical storyteller...Boundless in its understanding of the human spirit…will resonate with readers everywhere.'                                                           
-- Olive Senior, Jamaican poet, short story writer and Commonwealth Prize-winner
 
'It's a dramatic and enlightening exploration of colonialism and revolt in Trinidad through the perceptions of two main characters caught up in a tumultuous history. It's also an honest and moving anatomy of a long marriage, its comforts and costs. What is very striking is the equal compassion in the portrayals of a faithless, selfish man and a disappointed woman - Monique's merciful identification with both of them reminds me of Toni Morrison.'
-- Linda Anderson, author of TO STAY ALIVE and CUCKOO

 

 

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