Hood Rat

Gavin Knight

Hood Rat
In its approach and style, Gavin Knight’s Hood Rat follows the New Journalism that revolutionised the form in the 60s. Suddenly reporters were bringing the techniques of fiction to broadsheet writing, and in the process experiencing the lives of the subjects they wrote about

The author of HOOD RAT will give a talk based on the research for his book, take questions and sign copies at this exciting event.

Kate Harvey
 

Kate Harvey
 


Kate Harvey
 

5: Birthday

It’s a funny thing how Pilgrim’s dad always knows when he’s going to do something. The old man pauses at the front door, trying to figure out how another afternoon ended up in a carpet of discarded Ladbrokes slips at his feet. He is silhouetted against the hallway light, stares out at the car waiting, engine warm. Inside are two young black guys, known thugs in shell suits, who glower back at him. He brought his son over from Jamaica at the age of eight, out of a life without electricity or water, and now here the boy is on his nineteenth birthday, a fully-fledged man gangster. He is baffled how this happened. Pilgrim thunders down the stairs and brushes straight past him, rolling his shoulders as he storms out to the car. Something is being planned for later, a man’s amount of trouble is brewing.