Andrea Levy's novel Small Island has won the Whitbread Book of the Year Prize.
Although she has recalled being “too busy sitting in the toilets talking about boys” at school, the combination of a second-generation immigrant and British working-class perspective in her writing has led to her being compared to British Asian writers such as Hanif Kureishi and Meera Syal, as well as novelists such as Roddy Doyle and Nick Hornby.
She took a course in writing before making her name, although Small Island is being hailed as her breakthrough novel. It took her 4½ years and hours of research through archives and at the RAF and Imperial War Museums.
In just a few months, she went from being the 7-1 outsider to win the Orange Prize for fiction to being the bookies’ favourite for the Whitbread after she beat such literary grandes dames as Rose Tremain, Margaret Atwood and Gillian Slovo to win the Orange Prize.
Elsewhere, the Financial Times takes on the labrynthine set of rules for the more "populist" Whitbread.


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