It's a generation on from
Wheatle's East of Acre Lane, and the
soundtrack has
changed from reggae to hip hop, but the career options open to young black males are still brutally limited. Set in Brixton, 20 years after the race riots, The Dirty South follows the adventures of teenager Dennis Huggins as he drifts into the easy, dangerous life of the
shotter - or drug dealer - and discovers that hard as the struggle for respect on the streets is,
the struggle for love is harder still.
At least Dennis' parents are trying to look out for him; too many of his friends have no guidance other than that offered by their fellow shotters, or the black Muslims with conversion in mind. Wheatle brilliantly evokes the temptations of the thug life for
young black men growing up in
London's Dirty South - a fast, compelling novel that offers no easy answers, but never shies away from asking difficult questions.
• A devastating indictment of society's failure to offer an alternative to ghetto culture
• The Dirty South sees straight into the minds of disaffected teenagers
• Wheatle gives inspirational talks at schools across south London
Praise for Alex Wheatle's previous novels:
'Wheatle has a compelling prose style - equal parts Richard Price and Chester Himes - and the
heady, dope-soaked, scarily aggressive atmosphere of south London is conveyed extremely
well. Wheatle's style and command of language and plot ensure he is a writer to watch' Observer
'Beautifully written, funny and full of insight' The Times
'A searing account of a young man's attempt to do the right thing' The Voice
Alex Wheatle
Alex 'Brixtonbard' Wheatle, author of six critically acclaimed novels to date, and honoured in the
Queen's Birthday Honours List 2008, with an MBE for services to literature. His debut novel was
Brixton Rock, then came the award-winning
East of Acre Lane (London New Writers Award 2000),
The Seven Sisters,
Checker and
Island Songs. Island Songs was a great success in Jamaica and is now a bestseller in the country.
Alex Wheatle was born in 1963 to Jamaican parents living in
London. He spent most of his childhood in a children's home,
leaving at 14 to live in a hostel in Brixton. At 18, he was involved
in the Brixton uprising and went to prison for 3 months. On his
release, he continued to DJ and MC under the name Yardman Irie, with a sound system in the late 1970's early 1980's.
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He then moved in the early '90s on to the performance poetry circuit as
The Brixton Bard.
Two of his novels,
East Of Acre Lane &
Island Songs, have been translated into French, and in Paris he is known as the Barde du Brixton (the Brixtonbard)
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