Patrick Neate

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Patrick Neate (born 1970) is a British novelist, journalist and playwright.

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[edit] Early Life

Born and raised as a Roman Catholic in South London, he was educated at St. Paul's School and Cambridge University. He spent a Gap year in Zimbabwe and has since returned to Africa on many occasions. He drew on the Gap year experience in "Musungu Jim and the Great Chief Tuloko".

[edit] Works

His books to date, in order of publication, include Musungu Jim, Twelve Bar Blues, London Pigeon Wars, Where You're At, City of Tiny Lights and Culture is Our Weapon.

"Musungu Jim" and "Twelve Bar Blues" are in a sense a pair in that the character of Jim is found in both novels. However, both stand alone.

In each, he takes a foreign culture and explores the nature of story and the power of stories to create identities. At its best, his writing is lyrical about the nature of humanity, and yet still sufficiently entertaining to count as an 'easy read'. "Musungu Jim" envisages a coup triggered off by a hapless Gap Year student in an African dictatorship not unlike Mugabe's Zimbabwe. "Twelve Bar Blues" interweaves various characters but focusses chiefly on "Lick Holden" a semi-mythical horn player, not unlike the legendary Buddy Bolden.

In "The London Pigeon Wars", he attempted to talk about his own milieu, London, but the twist comes through the fact that part of the narrative is focalised through the pigeons who are at war in the area. Thematically, it tackles the dangers of consumerism.

"City of Tiny Lights" is a further change of genre, entering the mystery thriller. This time, the publication uncannily coincided with the 7 7 bombings in London as his cricket loving detective, Tommy Akhtar, uncovers crime that leads into terrorist cells.

"Where You're At" draws on Neate's first love, hip hop. Non-fiction, he crosses the planet to uncover the meanings hip hop has accrued in different cultures.

Across his work, recurring themes are the ability of re-envisage common situations from an alternative point of view, to imagine himself into the mindset of a completely different world and to realise the importance of story in establishing one's self identity.

Publications for which Neate has written include The Washington Post, The Independent, Building, Hospital Doctor, The Face, Doctor, Minx, The Times, The Telegraph, Marie Claire, The Sunday Times, The Guardian, Harpers and Queen, The Sunday Tribune, The Standard, Mixmag, Sky, Q, Time Out, Tatler, The Sunday Telegraph, The Independent on Sunday.

Neate also wrote the screenplay for the film The Tesseract, adapted from the book by Alex Garland.

A passionate supporter of literary diversity, Neate founded Book Slam with Ben Watt (from Everything But The Girl), the UK's best storytelling salon, where writers, poets and singer-songwriters perform in a nightclub environment.

[edit] Awards

In 2000, Neate won a Betty Trask Award for his first novel, 'Musungu Jim'. In 2001 he won a Whitbread Award for his second book, Twelve Bar Blues. In 2005, he won the NBCC Award for Criticism for his non-fiction book about hip hop culture, 'Where You're At'. He has also been shortlisted for the Authors' Club Award, the LA Times Book Award and an 'Edgar' (the Mystery Writers of America Awards).

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