English author
Sylvia Riley , better known by her pen-name Carol Lake , is an English author.[ 1] She was the winner of the Guardian Fiction Prize [ 2] in 1989 with Rosehill: Portrait from a Midlands City .[ 3] [ 2] She also wrote Switchboard Operators , upon which the BBC drama series The Hello Girls was based.[ 4]
During the 1960s, Riley was a member of the International Marxist Group in Nottingham, where she lived and worked at the bookshop run by Pat Jordan .[ 5]
Works
Riley, Sylvia (2019). Winter at the Bookshop: Politics and Poverty. St Ann's in the 1960s . ISBN 9781910170663 .
References
^ "Winter at the Bookshop, book launch with Sylvia Riley" . Five Leaves Bookshop . Retrieved 1 February 2020 .
^ a b Keith, Michael; Pile, Steve, eds. (2005) [1993]. "7: Reading Rosehill: Community, identity, and inner-city Derby" . Place and the Politics of Identity . Routledge . ISBN 9781134877423 . Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ Clapp, Susannah (6 July 1989). "Coming out with something" . London Review of Books . Vol. 11, no. 13. Archived from the original on 23 December 2019. Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ Depository, Book. "Switchboard Operators : Carol Lake : 9780747534907" . www.bookdepository.co.uk .
^ Riley, Sylvia (2019). Winter at the Bookshop: Politics and Poverty. St Ann's in the 1960s . Nottingham: Five Leaves Publications. ISBN 9781910170663 .
^ "Rosehill: Portraits From A Midlands City" . isbndb.com . Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ "Switchboard Operators" . isbndb.com . Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ "Wendy and Her Year of Wonders" . isbnsearch.org . Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
^ "Those Summers at Moon Farm" . isbnsearch.org . Retrieved 30 December 2019 .
International National People