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Kaliane Bradley: A Rising Star in the Literary World
Kaliane Bradley is a name to watch in the literary world. She 🏧 has just published her first novel, "The Ministry of Time," a time-travel romance cum sci-fi comedy set in near-future London. 🏧 The novel has received praise from writers such as Eleanor Catton and David Nicholls and has a TV adaptation 🏧 in the works.
From Walthamstow to the World
Bradley was born and raised in Walthamstow, east London, where she still lives with 🏧 her partner and cat. She grew up in a multicultural household, with a British father and a Khmer mother who 🏧 moved to the UK during the Cambodian civil war. She spent her childhood sharing a bedroom with her twin sisters 🏧 and her half-brother while her parents rented out the house.
"The Lucky Jumper" and The Ministry of Time
Bradley wrote "The Ministry 🏧 of Time" by accident, as she puts it. She had been working on a "thankless, loveless" project for years but 🏧 found herself drawn to time-travel stories during the pandemic. She immersed herself in the TV series "The Terror" and became 🏧 fascinated by Lt. Graham Gore, a man of "great stability of character and sweetest of tempers." This fascination led her 🏧 to create a "nerdy literary parlour game" online, which eventually turned into the novel.
Character | Bridge |
---|---|
Lt. Graham Gore | A young British-Cambodian woman |
Lieutenant from 🏧 the battle of Naseby | To be determined |
Beautiful, foul-mouthed lesbian from the great plague of London | To be determined |
Unhappy aristocrat from the French 🏧 Revolution | To be determined |
Soldier from the first world war | To be determined |
In "The Ministry of Time," Bradley explores the experience of immigrants 🏧 in modern Britain by placing "expatriates from history" in modern London. She uses time-travel as a metaphor for the assimilation 🏧 of immigrants into British society, as they are told they must assimilate, have certain values, and be productive for society. 🏧 The hilarious and sparky one-liners afforded by the time-travel conceit make the novel a fun and thought-provoking read.
"Maybe this is 🏧 the British-Cambodian novel I was supposed to be writing."
Through Gore, Bradley found a way to express her mother's past and 🏧 the inherited trauma of Cambodia's history. Gore's realization that "they are all dead" and the world he knew is gone 🏧 is a poignant reflection of the trauma experienced by refugees and immigrants. While Bradley has no plans to give up 🏧 her day job, she is already deep into her second novel, an extension of her prize-winning short story.