Leone Ross


Leone Ross FRSL is a British novelist, short story writer, editor, journalist and academic, who is of Jamaican and Scottish ancestry.

Biography

Early years and education

Leone Ross was born in Coventry, England. When she was six years old, Ross migrated with her mother to Jamaica, where she was raised and educated. After graduating from the University of the West Indies in 1990, Ross returned to England to do her master's degree in International Journalism at City University, in London, where she now lives.

Career

Her first novel, All The Blood Is Red, was published by Angela Royal Publishing in 1996. It was nominated for the Orange Prize in 1997. Her second novel, Orange Laughter, was published in the UK by Anchor Press, in the United States by Farrar, Straus & Giroux and Picador, and in France by Actes Sud. Ross's first short-story collection, Come Let Us Sing Anyway, published in 2017, was widely acclaimed. Maggie Gee in The Times Literary Supplement characterised Ross as "a pointilliste, a master of detail", and in a review for The Guardian, Bernardine Evaristo described the collection as "remarkable" and "outrageously funny", saying: "Ross writes here with searing empathy and compassion....The effect is mesmerising, shocking, unforgettable". The book was described on BBC Radio 4's A Good Read as "incredibly rare, extraordinary".
In 2009, Wasafiri magazine placed Ross's second novel, Orange Laughter, on its list of 25 Most Influential Books from the previous quarter-century. Come Let Us Sing Anyway was nominated for the V.S. Pritchett Prize, Salt Publishing's Scott Prize, the Jhalak Prize and was shortlisted for the 2018 Edge Hill Prize. It was named runner-up Best Collection in the public-voted Saboteur Awards. In 2000, Ross was a recipient of a London Arts Board Writers Award. She has represented the British Council in the United States, South Korea, Slovakia, Romania, Sweden, and across the UK.
In September 2004, Ross was chosen as one of 50 Black and Asian writers who have made major contributions to contemporary British literature, appearing in the historic "A Great Day in London" photograph taken at the British Library.
Her short fiction and essays have been widely anthologised, including in the Brown Sugar erotica series, which zoomed to number three on the Los Angeles Times Bestseller List. Other US collections featuring her work include Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora and The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror . In 2000, she co-edited the award-winning Whispers in The Walls: New Black and Asian Writing from Birmingham. In 2021, she will edit a speculative fiction anthology, by Black British writers, for Peepal Tree Press.
Prior to the publication of her books, Ross worked as a journalist and editor for 14 years. She held the post of Arts Editor at The Voice newspaper, Women's Editor at the New Nation newspaper, and was transitional Editor for Pride magazine in the UK. She also held the position of Deputy Editor at Sibyl, a feminist magazine. She has freelanced for The Independent on Sunday and The Guardian, as well as for London Weekend Television and the BBC.
Ross writes novels and short stories in speculative fiction, erotica, and Caribbean fiction genres. In 2015, she judged the Manchester Fiction Prize, alongside Stuart Kelly. She has judged the Spread the Word London Short Story Prize with agent Emma Paterson, the V. S. Pritchett Award with novelist Candice Carty-Williams and Philip Hensher, the Mslexia Short Fiction award with novelist Sunny Singh, and for several years, the Wimbledon Bookfest Competition.
Ross is a contributor to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby, and the 2020 anthology Outsiders edited by Alice Slater. In 2021, Ross released This One Sky Day and—during an interview in which she discussed her novel—Ross revealed that she is bisexual and that she "...often felt like I'm sitting in the middle...". Described as "an exuberant work of magical realism that was 15 years in the making", This One Sky Day was shortlisted for the 2021 Goldsmiths Prize and was included on the longlist for the 2022 Women's Prize for Fiction.
Ross has worked at Cardiff University, Trinity College Dublin, the City Literary Institute and the Arvon Foundation, and was Senior Lecturer in the Creative Writing department at Roehampton University in London, where she was Anthology Editor for their micro-publishing house, Fincham Press. She is a Senior Fellow of the UK Higher Education Academy.
In 2023, Ross was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Works

Novels

  • This One Sky Day
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    Collections

  • ''Come Let Us Sing Anyway and other stories''

    Short stories

  • "Headache" in A Cage Went In Search Of A Bird: Ten Kafkaesque Short Stories
  • "When We Went Gallivanting" in Best British Short Stories 2023, ed. Nicholas Royle
  • “Peep Hole” in , ed. Alice Slater
  • "Why You Shouldn't Take Yourself So Seriously" in New Daughters of Africa, ed. Margaret Busby.
  • "President Daisy" reprinted in The Peepal Tree Book of Contemporary Caribbean Short Stories, eds Jeremy Poynting & Jacob Ross.
  • "Meat-Kind" in The Mechanics Institute Review, Issue 15.
  • "Ecdysis" commissioned by The British Council as part of their Discover project – brings together BC UK and BC Turkey, June 2018.
  • "Adulting" commissioned by Spread The Word London. Ross was one of their City Of Stories Writers in Residence in 2018. Published in their City of Stories, Volume 2, September 2018.
  • "Carousel” in Pree magazine, ed. Annie Paul, Jamaica: Issue 1: Crossroads
  • "The Woman Who Lived In A Restaurant" originally published as a limited edition chapbook by UK: Nightjar Press, ed. Nicholas Royle, Oct 2015; reprinted in Best British Short Stories 2016, ed. Nicholas Royle, UK: Salt Publishing, 2016; reprinted in The Barcelona Review, Issue 88, 2016 ; reprinted in The Penguin Book of the Contemporary British Short Story, ed. Philip Hensher, UK: Penguin, October 2018
  • "The Woman Who Lived in a Restaurant" as a limited edition chapbook, ed. Nicholas Royle
  • "The Mullerian Eminence" in Closure: Contemporary Black British Short Stories,, ed. Jacob Ross
  • "Fix" in The World to Come, eds Om Prakash Dwivedi and Patrick West
  • "Smile" in , 10 April 2013; collected in Minuteman
  • "Roll It" in Kingston Noir, ed. Colin Channer
  • "Love Silk Food" in Wasafari magazine, Volume 25, No. 4, eds Bernardine Evaristo and Karen McCarthy ; reprinted in The Best British Short Stories 2011, ed. Nicholas Royle
  • "When the River" in Making the Hook Up: Edgy Sex with Soul, ed. Cole Riley
  • "The Heart Has No Bones" in the zine Incommunicado: Uncommon Book_Map, eds Romy Ash and Tom Doig
  • "Breakfast Time" in Tell Tales, Vol. 2, ed. Rajeev Balasuramanyam
  • "President Daisy" in The Writer Fellow: An Anthology, eds Terence Brown and Gerald Dawe
  • "Breathing" in Fish Anthology 2004: Spoonface and Other Stories, ed. Clem Cairns
  • "Contract" in Brown Sugar 3: When Opposites Attract, ed. Carol Taylor
  • "Art, for Fuck's Sake", in Carol Taylor, Brown Sugar 2: Great One-Night Stands
  • "Covenant" in Obsidian III: Literature in the African Diaspora, Vol. 2, No. 2, Fall/Winter 2000–2001, ed. Kwame Dawes ; in Leone Ross and Yvonne Brissett, Whispers in the Walls: New Black and Asian Voices from Birmingham
  • "Drag" in Brown Sugar: A Collection of Erotic Black Fiction, ed. Carol Taylor
  • "Mudman" in The Time Out Book of London Short Stories, Volume 2, ed. Nicholas Royle
  • "Tasting Songs" in Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora, ed. Sheree R. Thomas ; reprinted in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: 14th Annual Collection, ed. Ellen Datlow
  • "And You Know This" in Wild Ways: New Stories About Women on the Road, eds Margo Daley and Jill Dawson
  • "Façade" in Burning Words, Flaming Images: Poems and Short Stories by Writers of African Descent, ed. Kadija Sesay ; reprinted in England Calling: 24 Stories for the 21st Century, eds Julia Bell and Jackie Gay
  • "Phone Call to a Rape Crisis Centre" in Burning Words, Flaming Images: Poems and Short Stories by Writers of African Descent, ed. Kadija Sesay

    Non-Fiction

  • “A Fat Woman’s Love Letter To Water” in the Power Issue of Lighthouse Journal, Issue 18, ed. Anna de Vaul
  • "How to Write Weird Shit" in The Art of the Novel, ed. Nicholas Royle
  • Foreword to David I. Muir's The Real Rock: Pieces of Jamaica
  • "The People" in Discover Jamaica
  • How Many Storeys? The History of Housing Associations in the UK
  • Afterword to Laurie Gunst's Born Fi' Dead: A Journey Through the Yardie Posse Underworld
  • "Black Narcissus" in IC3: The Penguin Book of New Black Writing in Britain, eds Courttia Newland and Kadija Sesay

    Poetry

  • Poetry in Burning Words, Flaming Images, ed. Kadija Sesay
  • Poetry in Creation Fire: A CAFRA Anthology of Caribbean Women's Poetry, ed. Ramabai Espinet

    Awards and nominations

  • Winner of the 2022 Manchester Prize for Fiction: "When We Went Gallivanting"
This One Sky Day
  • Longlisted for 2022 Women's Prize for Fiction
  • Longlisted for the 2021 RSL Ondjaate Prize for best novel evoking a place
  • Shortlisted for the Goldsmith's Prize 2021 for innovative novel writing
  • Nominated for: Bad Form magazine's Novel Of the Year 2021
  • Nominated for: Rebel Women Lit's Caribbean Book of the Year 2021
Come Let Us Sing Anyway
  • Nominated for: Salt Publishing's Scott Prize
  • Nominated for: The 2018 Jhalak Prize
  • Shortlisted for the 2018 Edge Hill Prize
  • Runner-up, Best Collection in the public-voted Saboteur Awards, 2018
Also:
  • Nominated for: The 2015 VS Pritchett Prize: "Love Silk Food"
  • All The Blood Is Red longlisted for the 1997 Women's Prize
  • London Arts Board Writers Award