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Nii Parkes

Nii Ayikwei Parkes (/ˌnˈi ˈˈɪkw ˈpɑːrks/;[2] born 1 April 1974),[3] born in the United Kingdom to parents from Ghana, where he was raised, is a performance poet, writer, publisher and sociocultural commentator. He is one of 39 writers aged under 40 from sub-Saharan Africa who in April 2014 were named as part of the Hay Festival's prestigious Africa39 project.[4] He writes for children under the name K.P. Kojo.[5]

Nii Parkes
BornNii Ayikwei Parkes
(1974-04-01) 1 April 1974 (age 48)
Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
Pen nameK.P. Kojo
OccupationNovelist, editor, poet, broadcaster, essayist
Alma materAchimota School
Manchester Metropolitan University
Birkbeck College[1]
Period1999–present
GenreFiction, poetry
SubjectSemiotics
Literary movementAnansesem, Postmodernism
Notable worksTail of the Blue Bird,
The Makings of You
Notable awardsPrix Laure Bataillon
RelativesJ. C. E. Parkes
Kofi Awoonor

Biography

Born in the UK while his parents were studying there, Nii Parkes was raised from the age of three or four in Ghana,[6] where he was educated at Achimota School. His first editorial role was in 1988 working on his school magazine, The Achimotan, and he went on to co-found, at the age of 17, filla! magazine, Ghana's first student-run national magazine.[7] Parkes subsequently studied in England at Manchester Metropolitan University. While there, he emerged as a performance poet and was also a member of the Black Writer's Group of Commonword.[3] He was children's poet-in-residence at the Brighton Festival in 2007.[8]

A veteran of several poetry festivals, and former poet-in-residence at the Poetry Café in London, he has performed poetry in the United Kingdom, Europe, Ghana and the United States and was a 2005 Associate Artist-In-Residence with BBC Radio 3. In 2007 he was British Council writer-in-residence at California State University, Los Angeles[9] and became one of the youngest living writers (along with Owen Sheers and Choman Hardi) featured in the Poems on the Underground programme in London with his poem "Tin Roof".[10]

Parkes runs regular workshops in the UK and set up a Writer's Fund in Ghana to promote writing among the country's youth.[11] He has recorded two CDs of his spoken-word poetry, Incredible Blues and Nocturne of Phrase, and has published three chapbooks of poetry – eyes of a boy, lips of a man, M is for Madrigal, and the self-published Shorter!,[12] which was put together to raise money for the Writers' Fund initiative.

He is also the co-founder and Senior Editor at flipped eye publishing, for whom he has edited fourteen two (editor), Dance the Guns to Silence (co-editor with Kadija Sesay) and x-24: unclassified (co-editor with Tash Aw).

Parkes' short stories can be found in Tell Tales: Volume I (Tell Tales) and The Mechanics' Institute Review (Birkbeck College) and an excerpt from his second fiction manuscript, Afterbirth,[13] was featured in the New Writing 15 anthology published by Granta Books in June 2007.

Also a playwright, his début play Walking Waterfall ran at London’s Almeida Theatre on 30 July and 31 July 2008, as part of the Tiata Fahodzi 2008 Tiata Delights season.[14] The production was directed by Femi Elufowoju Jr., and featured a cast including Jude Akuwudike and Marcy Dolapo Oni. It later toured in East Anglia.

His debut novel, Tail of the Blue Bird, was published by Jonathan Cape in June 2009, and was shortlisted for the 2010 Commonwealth Writers' Prize. Translated into French by Sika Fakambi, it was published as Notre Quelque Part by Éditions Zulma, winning the 2014 Prix Baudelaire, Prix Mahogany and Prix Laure Bataillon and being selected by leading literary magazine Lire as the Best First Foreign Book of the year and one of the Top 20 books published in France in 2014.[15]

An experienced performer of his work, he has appeared at readings all over the world, including the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, New York; the Royal Festival Hall, London; and Java, Paris, and often leads writing and performance workshops. He was the resident poet at Borders Bookstores, where he hosted the monthly open mike at Charing Cross Road between 2001 and 2005.

He became BookTrust's online writer-in-residence in 2009.[16][17] In 2010 he became a writer-in-residence for the charity First Story.[18] He also ran the African Writers' Evening[19] series at the Poetry Café in Covent Garden.

In 2012 Parkes represented Ghana at Poetry Parnassus at the Southbank Centre in London, the largest international poetry festival in the UK held in conjunction with the London Olympics.[20][21][22] In autumn 2014 the University of Tübingen welcomed him and his fellow writers Taiye Selasi, Priya Basil and Chika Unigwe and to that year's Writers' Lectureship, all of them writers representing what Selasi calls Afropolitan Literature.

In 2014–15, Parkes was the Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University of Aberystwyth, Wales.[23] He was selected as one of Africa's 39 most promising authors under the age of 40 for the World Book Capital Africa39 project in 2014.[24]

Parkes ran the Creative Writing course at the African University College of Communications (AUCC) in Accra, Ghana,[15] and sat on the Board of Trustees of pan-African literary initiative Writivism, with fellow writers Zukiswa Wanner, Chika Unigwe, NoViolet Bulawayo, E. C. Osondu and Lizzy Attree until 2015.[25]

Parkes was appointed as the founding director of the Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing (Aidoo Centre), launched in Accra in March 2017, under the auspices of the Kojo Yankah School of Communications Studies at the African University College of Communications (AUCC).[26][27][28]

He serves on the editorial board of World Literature Today,[29] is a trustee of the Caine Prize,[30] and in 2019 became Producer of Literature and Talks at the Brighton Festival.[31] He was chair of judges for the 2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize.[32]

His 2020 poetry collection, The Geez, was longlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize, shortlisted for the Walcott Prize, and is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation.[33]

Personal life

Parkes is a descendant of J. C. E. Parkes, the Sierra Leone Creole civil servant.

Selected bibliography

Writing by Parkes has appeared in many publications, including Granta, The Guardian, Index on Censorship, International PEN Magazine, The Liberal, The Mechanics' Institute Review, Poetry News, Poetry Review, Sable, Statement (CSULA), Storyteller Magazine, X Magazine and Wasafiri.

Fiction

  • Tail of the Blue Bird (novel), Jonathan Cape, 2009; Vintage, 2010, ISBN 978-0099526124.
    • Translated into Dutch (by Ronald Cohen) as De blauwe vogel, Q, 2010, ISBN 978-90-2143-846-7.
    • Translated into Japanese (by Kazue Daikoku) as Aoitori no Shippo, Web Press Happa-no-Kofu, 2014, ISBN 978-4-901274-28-9.
    • Translated into French (by Sika Fakambi) as Notre Quelque Part,[6] Zulma, 2014, ISBN 978-2843047701.
    • Translated into Spanish (by Magdalena Palmer) as El Enigma del Pájaro Azul, Club Editor, 2017, ISBN 978-84-7329-217-7.
    • Translated into Catalan (by Xavier Pàmies) as L'enigma de l'ocell blau, Club Editor, 2017, ISBN 978-84-7329-216-0.

Poetry

Children's literature

As editor

Selected essays and articles

  • "No individual 'fathered' modern African literature", The Guardian, 2 December 2009.
  • "Ants of Accra", Granta 112, 2 September 2010.
  • "Nii Ayikwei Parkes. My London: Blythe Hill Fields", The Financial Times, 8 August 2014.
  • "The Responsibility of Being Other", Writivism, 4 July 2017.

Awards and recognition

References

  1. ^ Website bio
  2. ^ "Interview with Nii Ayikwei Parkes". Video by Pen International, 28 April 2011.
  3. ^ a b Open Directory Project.
  4. ^ List of artists Africa39, Hay Festival of Literature & the Arts.
  5. ^ K.P. Kojo profile on Penguin website, Penguin, UK publisher.
  6. ^ a b Laura Angela Bagnetto, "African novelists aren't travel guides", RFI, 20 January 2016.
  7. ^ a b c "Nii Ayikwei Parkes, YCE Finalist" 7 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, British Council Creative Economy.
  8. ^ Nii Ayikwei Parkes Biography, Time to Read.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 15 June 2007.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 June 2007. Retrieved 15 June 2007.
  11. ^ "Nii Ayikwei Parkes: Poets must learn editing and performing", Start: Journal of Arts and Culture, Issue 023, 4 August 2012.
  12. ^ Nii Ayikwei Parkes at the British Council.
  13. ^ Evaristo, Bernardine, and Maggie Gee (eds), NW15: the anthology of New Writing Volume 15, London: Granta, 2007.
  14. ^ Tiata Delights 08 at the Almeida.
  15. ^ a b "Nii Parkes (UK/Ghana)", Centre for the Creative Arts, University of Kwazulu-Natal, 27 September 2015.
  16. ^ Alison Flood, "'Freddie Flintoff of publishing' to become online writer-in-residence", The Guardian, 14 September 2009.
  17. ^ "Interview with Nii Parkes", BookTrust, 6 November 2009.
  18. ^ "New First Story writers for 2010–2011", First Story.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 September 2010. Retrieved 15 June 2007.
  20. ^ "Parkes, Nii Ayikwei", Poetry Parnassus, Southbank Centre.
  21. ^ "The pick of the world's poetry in London", Evening Standard, 29 June 2012.
  22. ^ Cat Lucas, "English PEN at the Poetry Parnassus", English PEN, 18 June 2012.
  23. ^ "Nii Ayikwei Parkes" (Former Fellows), Royal Literary Fund.
  24. ^ Margaret Busby, "Africa39: how we chose the writers for Port Harcourt World Book Capital 2014", The Guardian, 10 April 2014.
  25. ^ "Announcing the Writivism Board of Trustees", Writivism, 2 December 2013.
  26. ^ "AUCC Launches Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing", Modern Ghana, 15 March 2017.
  27. ^ "Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing opens in Accra, Ghana", James Murua Blog, 22 March 2017.
  28. ^ Kwamina Tandoh/Winifred Zuur, "Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing inaugurated", Ghana News Agency, 16 March 2017.
  29. ^ "Masthead", World Literature Today.
  30. ^ "About Us", Ako Caine Prize.
  31. ^ "African arts set to star in this year's Brighton Festival", ITV, 7 April 2019.
  32. ^ Ruth Comerford, "2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize shortlist announced", The Bookseller, 22 April 2020.
  33. ^ "The Geez by Nii Ayikwei Parkes | PBS Recommendation Winter 2020", Poetry Book Society.
  34. ^ "South of South Detail Page at Peepal Tree Press".
  35. ^ "Filigree Detail Page at Peepal Tree Press".
  36. ^ "Nii Ayikwei Parkes", Performance Poets, Apples and Snakes.
  37. ^ "Nii Ayikwei Parkes wins award for second successive year", GhanaWeb, 26 January 2005.
  38. ^ "USBBY's Outstanding International Books connect kids worldwide By Kathy East", School Library Journal, February 2012.

External links

  • Nii Parkes website
  • "D. Herrle Tea Interviews - Nii Parkes", SubtleTea.com, 2003.
  • Ben JK Anim-Antwi (Kwesi), "Profile: Nii Ayikwei Parkes", Me Firi Ghana, 12 April 2012.
  • Will Barrett, "Where It Begins: an interview with Nii Ayikwei Parkes", Poetry School.
  • "Nii Ayikwei Parkes" (interview), African Writing Online.


parkes, ayikwei, parkes, ɑːr, born, april, 1974, born, united, kingdom, parents, from, ghana, where, raised, performance, poet, writer, publisher, sociocultural, commentator, writers, aged, under, from, saharan, africa, april, 2014, were, named, part, festival. Nii Ayikwei Parkes ˌ n iː ˈ i ˈ aɪ ˈ ɪ k w eɪ ˈ p ɑːr k s 2 born 1 April 1974 3 born in the United Kingdom to parents from Ghana where he was raised is a performance poet writer publisher and sociocultural commentator He is one of 39 writers aged under 40 from sub Saharan Africa who in April 2014 were named as part of the Hay Festival s prestigious Africa39 project 4 He writes for children under the name K P Kojo 5 Nii ParkesBornNii Ayikwei Parkes 1974 04 01 1 April 1974 age 48 Lincolnshire United KingdomPen nameK P KojoOccupationNovelist editor poet broadcaster essayistAlma materAchimota SchoolManchester Metropolitan UniversityBirkbeck College 1 Period1999 presentGenreFiction poetrySubjectSemioticsLiterary movementAnansesem PostmodernismNotable worksTail of the Blue Bird The Makings of YouNotable awardsPrix Laure BataillonRelativesJ C E Parkes Kofi Awoonor Contents 1 Biography 2 Personal life 3 Selected bibliography 3 1 Fiction 3 2 Poetry 3 3 Children s literature 3 4 As editor 3 5 Selected essays and articles 4 Awards and recognition 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditBorn in the UK while his parents were studying there Nii Parkes was raised from the age of three or four in Ghana 6 where he was educated at Achimota School His first editorial role was in 1988 working on his school magazine The Achimotan and he went on to co found at the age of 17 filla magazine Ghana s first student run national magazine 7 Parkes subsequently studied in England at Manchester Metropolitan University While there he emerged as a performance poet and was also a member of the Black Writer s Group of Commonword 3 He was children s poet in residence at the Brighton Festival in 2007 8 A veteran of several poetry festivals and former poet in residence at the Poetry Cafe in London he has performed poetry in the United Kingdom Europe Ghana and the United States and was a 2005 Associate Artist In Residence with BBC Radio 3 In 2007 he was British Council writer in residence at California State University Los Angeles 9 and became one of the youngest living writers along with Owen Sheers and Choman Hardi featured in the Poems on the Underground programme in London with his poem Tin Roof 10 Parkes runs regular workshops in the UK and set up a Writer s Fund in Ghana to promote writing among the country s youth 11 He has recorded two CDs of his spoken word poetry Incredible Blues and Nocturne of Phrase and has published three chapbooks of poetry eyes of a boy lips of a man M is for Madrigal and the self published Shorter 12 which was put together to raise money for the Writers Fund initiative He is also the co founder and Senior Editor at flipped eye publishing for whom he has edited fourteen two editor Dance the Guns to Silence co editor with Kadija Sesay and x 24 unclassified co editor with Tash Aw Parkes short stories can be found in Tell Tales Volume I Tell Tales and The Mechanics Institute Review Birkbeck College and an excerpt from his second fiction manuscript Afterbirth 13 was featured in the New Writing 15 anthology published by Granta Books in June 2007 Also a playwright his debut play Walking Waterfall ran at London s Almeida Theatre on 30 July and 31 July 2008 as part of the Tiata Fahodzi 2008 Tiata Delights season 14 The production was directed by Femi Elufowoju Jr and featured a cast including Jude Akuwudike and Marcy Dolapo Oni It later toured in East Anglia His debut novel Tail of the Blue Bird was published by Jonathan Cape in June 2009 and was shortlisted for the 2010 Commonwealth Writers Prize Translated into French by Sika Fakambi it was published as Notre Quelque Part by Editions Zulma winning the 2014 Prix Baudelaire Prix Mahogany and Prix Laure Bataillon and being selected by leading literary magazine Lire as the Best First Foreign Book of the year and one of the Top 20 books published in France in 2014 15 An experienced performer of his work he has appeared at readings all over the world including the Nuyorican Poets Cafe New York the Royal Festival Hall London and Java Paris and often leads writing and performance workshops He was the resident poet at Borders Bookstores where he hosted the monthly open mike at Charing Cross Road between 2001 and 2005 He became BookTrust s online writer in residence in 2009 16 17 In 2010 he became a writer in residence for the charity First Story 18 He also ran the African Writers Evening 19 series at the Poetry Cafe in Covent Garden In 2012 Parkes represented Ghana at Poetry Parnassus at the Southbank Centre in London the largest international poetry festival in the UK held in conjunction with the London Olympics 20 21 22 In autumn 2014 the University of Tubingen welcomed him and his fellow writers Taiye Selasi Priya Basil and Chika Unigwe and to that year s Writers Lectureship all of them writers representing what Selasi calls Afropolitan Literature In 2014 15 Parkes was the Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University of Aberystwyth Wales 23 He was selected as one of Africa s 39 most promising authors under the age of 40 for the World Book Capital Africa39 project in 2014 24 Parkes ran the Creative Writing course at the African University College of Communications AUCC in Accra Ghana 15 and sat on the Board of Trustees of pan African literary initiative Writivism with fellow writers Zukiswa Wanner Chika Unigwe NoViolet Bulawayo E C Osondu and Lizzy Attree until 2015 25 Parkes was appointed as the founding director of the Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing Aidoo Centre launched in Accra in March 2017 under the auspices of the Kojo Yankah School of Communications Studies at the African University College of Communications AUCC 26 27 28 He serves on the editorial board of World Literature Today 29 is a trustee of the Caine Prize 30 and in 2019 became Producer of Literature and Talks at the Brighton Festival 31 He was chair of judges for the 2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize 32 His 2020 poetry collection The Geez was longlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize shortlisted for the Walcott Prize and is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation 33 Personal life EditParkes is a descendant of J C E Parkes the Sierra Leone Creole civil servant Selected bibliography EditWriting by Parkes has appeared in many publications including Granta The Guardian Index on Censorship International PEN Magazine The Liberal The Mechanics Institute Review Poetry News Poetry Review Sable Statement CSULA Storyteller Magazine X Magazine and Wasafiri Fiction Edit Tail of the Blue Bird novel Jonathan Cape 2009 Vintage 2010 ISBN 978 0099526124 Translated into Dutch by Ronald Cohen as De blauwe vogel Q 2010 ISBN 978 90 2143 846 7 Translated into Japanese by Kazue Daikoku as Aoitori no Shippo Web Press Happa no Kofu 2014 ISBN 978 4 901274 28 9 Translated into French by Sika Fakambi as Notre Quelque Part 6 Zulma 2014 ISBN 978 2843047701 Translated into Spanish by Magdalena Palmer as El Enigma del Pajaro Azul Club Editor 2017 ISBN 978 84 7329 217 7 Translated into Catalan by Xavier Pamies as L enigma de l ocell blau Club Editor 2017 ISBN 978 84 7329 216 0 Poetry Edit eyes of a boy lips of a man Flipped Eye Publishing 1999 2nd edition 2005 ISBN 978 9988002466 M is for Madrigal Seven Poems tall lighthouse 2004 ISBN 978 1904551096 The Makings of You Peepal Tree Press 2010 ISBN 978 1845231590 The Geez Peepal Tree Press 2020 ISBN 9781845234775 Children s literature Edit The Parade Frances Lincoln Publishers 2010 as K P Kojo Tales From Africa Puffin Classics 2017 as K P Kojo The Ga Picture Alphabet Kane Series 2020As editor Edit Fourteen Two Twenty Eight Love Poems flipped eye publishing 2004 ISBN 978 0954224790 With Kadija Sesay Dance the Guns to Silence 100 Poems for Ken Saro Wiwa flipped eye publishing 2005 ISBN 978 1905233014 includes work by Amiri Baraka Sonia Sanchez Kevin Powell amp Jayne Cortez With Tash Aw X 24 Unclassified flipped eye publishing 2007 ISBN 978 0954157012 includes work by Naomi Alderman amp Daniel Alarcon South of South Peepal Tree Press 2011 ISBN 978 1845231545 includes work by Monica Arac de Nyeko amp Junot Diaz 34 Filigree Contemporary Black British Poetry Peepal Tree Press 2018 ISBN 978 1845234263 includes work by Roger Robinson amp Tishani Doshi 35 Selected essays and articles Edit No individual fathered modern African literature The Guardian 2 December 2009 Ants of Accra Granta 112 2 September 2010 Nii Ayikwei Parkes My London Blythe Hill Fields The Financial Times 8 August 2014 The Responsibility of Being Other Writivism 4 July 2017 Awards and recognition Edit2003 Farrago Best Overall Poetry Performance Award 36 2004 Farrago Best Overall Poetry Performance Award 37 2007 Ghana s National ACRAG award for poetry and literary advocacy 7 2009 Finalist for the UK YCE Publishing Award 7 2010 Shortlisted for Commonwealth Writers Prize for Tail of the Blue Bird 2012 USBBY Outstanding International Books List 38 for The Parade as K P Kojo 2014 Prix Baudelaire Prix Mahogany and Prix Laure Bataillon for Notre Quelque Part 2020 Poetry Book Society Recommendation for The GeezReferences Edit Website bio Interview with Nii Ayikwei Parkes Video by Pen International 28 April 2011 a b Open Directory Project List of artists Africa39 Hay Festival of Literature amp the Arts K P Kojo profile on Penguin website Penguin UK publisher a b Laura Angela Bagnetto African novelists aren t travel guides RFI 20 January 2016 a b c Nii Ayikwei Parkes YCE Finalist Archived 7 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine British Council Creative Economy Nii Ayikwei Parkes Biography Time to Read British Council Poet in Residence Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 15 June 2007 The Poetry Society Poems on the Underground Archived from the original on 11 June 2007 Retrieved 15 June 2007 Nii Ayikwei Parkes Poets must learn editing and performing Start Journal of Arts and Culture Issue 023 4 August 2012 Nii Ayikwei Parkes at the British Council Evaristo Bernardine and Maggie Gee eds NW15 the anthology of New Writing Volume 15 London Granta 2007 Tiata Delights 08 at the Almeida a b Nii Parkes UK Ghana Centre for the Creative Arts University of Kwazulu Natal 27 September 2015 Alison Flood Freddie Flintoff of publishing to become online writer in residence The Guardian 14 September 2009 Interview with Nii Parkes BookTrust 6 November 2009 New First Story writers for 2010 2011 First Story African Writers Evening Archived from the original on 25 September 2010 Retrieved 15 June 2007 Parkes Nii Ayikwei Poetry Parnassus Southbank Centre The pick of the world s poetry in London Evening Standard 29 June 2012 Cat Lucas English PEN at the Poetry Parnassus English PEN 18 June 2012 Nii Ayikwei Parkes Former Fellows Royal Literary Fund Margaret Busby Africa39 how we chose the writers for Port Harcourt World Book Capital 2014 The Guardian 10 April 2014 Announcing the Writivism Board of Trustees Writivism 2 December 2013 AUCC Launches Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing Modern Ghana 15 March 2017 Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing opens in Accra Ghana James Murua Blog 22 March 2017 Kwamina Tandoh Winifred Zuur Ama Ata Aidoo Centre for Creative Writing inaugurated Ghana News Agency 16 March 2017 Masthead World Literature Today About Us Ako Caine Prize African arts set to star in this year s Brighton Festival ITV 7 April 2019 Ruth Comerford 2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize shortlist announced The Bookseller 22 April 2020 The Geez by Nii Ayikwei Parkes PBS Recommendation Winter 2020 Poetry Book Society South of South Detail Page at Peepal Tree Press Filigree Detail Page at Peepal Tree Press Nii Ayikwei Parkes Performance Poets Apples and Snakes Nii Ayikwei Parkes wins award for second successive year GhanaWeb 26 January 2005 USBBY s Outstanding International Books connect kids worldwide By Kathy East School Library Journal February 2012 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Nii Parkes Nii Parkes website D Herrle Tea Interviews Nii Parkes SubtleTea com 2003 Ben JK Anim Antwi Kwesi Profile Nii Ayikwei Parkes Me Firi Ghana 12 April 2012 Will Barrett Where It Begins an interview with Nii Ayikwei Parkes Poetry School Nii Ayikwei Parkes interview African Writing Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nii Parkes amp oldid 1120958008, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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