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That Reminds Me
That Reminds Me
Jan 11, 2026 9:13 PM

Author:Derek Owusu

That Reminds Me

WINNER OF THE DESMOND ELLIOTT PRIZE 2020

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'A singular achievement.'

Michael Donkor, Guardian

'Heartbreaking, important and original.'

Christie Watson, author of THE LANGUAGE OF KINDNESS

'Derek Owusu's writing is honest, moving, delicate, but tough. Once you lock on to his words, it is hard to break eye contact. A beautiful meditation on childhood, coming of age, the now, and the media. This work is heartfelt.'

Benjamin Zephaniah

'Honest and beautiful.'

Guy Gunaratne, author of IN OUR MAD AND FURIOUS CITY

'When writing is this honest, it soars. What an incredible use of language and truth.'

Yrsa Daley-Ward

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Anansi, your four gifts raised to nyame granted you no power over the stories I tell...

This is the story of K.

K is sent into care before a year marks his birth. He grows up in fields and woods, and he is happy, he thinks. When K is eleven, the city reclaims him. He returns to an unknown mother and a part-time father, trading the fields for flats and a community that is alien to him. Slowly, he finds friends. Eventually, he finds love. He learns how to navigate the city. But as he grows, he begins to realise that he needs more than the city can provide. He is a man made of pieces. Pieces that are slowly breaking apart

That Reminds Me is the story of one young man, from birth to adulthood, told in fragments of memory. It explores questions of identity, belonging, addiction, sexuality, violence, family and religion. It is a deeply moving and completely original work of literature from one of the brightest British writers of today.

Reviews

A dreamy, impressionistic offeringof reassembled fragments of memories emerging through the misty beauty of a deliciously individualistic poetic sensibility with flashes of Twi and UK London ebonics to further remind us of what has been missing from British poetry... I can't tell you how impressed I was and how much I enjoyed reading this stunning book.

—— Bernadine Evaristo, Booker Prize-winning author of Girl, Woman, Other

When writing is this honest, it soars. I think that this is why the words in this collection fly around you and settle, as they have. What an incredible use of language and truth. Hope this reaches all the mandem. We need more.

—— Yrsa Daley-Ward

These are words that come from the heart, the lived life and owned observations. Powerful and moving. Social realism at its best.

—— Alex Wheatle

I hate Derek Owusu for the same reasons I love him: he is the sort of writer who makes me and other writers have doubts about whether we belong in this art. He is one of a kind. Truly a precious stone of a poet. His words evoke flawless empathy and leave me with either a strained face from smiling or a wet page from crying. I consider myself enlightened, lucky, intimidated and gripped when I read his words.

—— Nelson Abbey

Derek Owusu’s writing is honest, moving, delicate, but tough. Once you lock on to his words, it is hard to break eye contact. A beautiful meditation on childhood, coming of age, the now, and the media. This work is heartfelt.

—— Benjamin Zephaniah

That Reminds Me by Derek Owusu reads like an open wound. The prose runs like a pulse, builds like the beat of some lowercase drum. Honest and beautiful.

—— Guy Gunaratne, author of In Our Mad and Furious City

That Reminds Me is heartbreaking, important and original. Derek Owusu's words are precious scars.

—— Christie Watson, author of The Language of Kindness

Owusu’s work is a much-needed contribution to literature. His work is profoundly tender, often wry and always sharply observed. He grants us a rare, nuanced glimpse into the world of a vulnerable young black man, negotiating his identity in a complex and difficult world.

—— Okechukwu Nzelu

Honest, insightful, and woven together in a narrative that will undoubtedly change lives.

—— DeRay McKesson

That Reminds Me is extraordinary. It’s a complex, emotional story – intimately told. Every word is used to great effect, and the images Derek evokes are simply stunning. It is unique, original and so very beautiful. I enjoyed this book very much.

—— Dorothy Koomson

This book was gripping and an emotional rollercoaster. One that we could not put down.

—— Sunny and Shay, BBC Radio London

Derek Owusu's voice is originally poetical and profoundly authentic. That Reminds Me is an addictive and painful delight, full of familiar bruises I don't know how I got but couldn't stop pressing.

—— Kobna Holdbrook-Smith

It's a tough read that rewards a thousand times. I love the fragmentary form and the sense of beauty that builds throughout. So raw, tender and transporting.

—— Rhik Samadder

A fresh and powerful debut... within contemporary British literature it is still uncommon to find these ideas about the brittleness of identity considered from the perspective of young black male characters. It is equally rare to find these concerns handled so unflinchingly... When the writing operates in this highly focused mode, as Owusu engages with the concrete minutiae of lived reality, That Reminds Me is especially powerful. K’s mother works as a cleaner at a local school, and his musings on her attitude to her job – “she is so attentive to the floor, like wiping food from her child’s face” – are expressed with real tenderness. A simple moment when the grown-up K gives a young black boy in the street coins so he can buy sweets like his white friends is revelatory. Told in unadorned sentences, this fleeting encounter speaks volumes about K’s perceptiveness, sensitivity and desire for connectedness. The same is true of a beautifully crystalline anecdote in which he helps an elderly Ghanaian stranger with her luggage on the tube. When the fragments mine the inner lives of those surrounding K, the writing often sings with particular feeling and clarity... in the sensitivity of its approach and its impressionistic quality, it is a singular achievement... There is a palpable charge and welcome freshness to the voice here that is undeniable.

—— Michael Donkor , Guardian

A moving, semi-autobiographical story about a vulnerable black man - a one-off. The story's most touching moments are about compassion and are never oversold... The sense is of suffering making room for empathetic insight. This book is brave and moving... Owusu writes with an enlightening fluency.

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer, 'Poetry Book of the Month'

If you want to see what the policies from Whitehall that keep the working classes struggling look like in human guise, when placed in an environment where their identities have to be negotiated daily, That Reminds Me is the viewfinder you need. It’s post-Thatcher reality in the inner city, clouded over by racism, infused with West African stoicism, narrated by a voice that has known something different. It’s life as a growing boy experiences it, with a powerless wonder; it’s messy and beautiful, fractured but eloquent. K’s story reminds us that our scars should not strip us of our dignity.

—— Nii Parkes

In weaving emotion into literary gold, truth has never been this painfully told, or this beautiful.

—— Courttia Newland

The best poetry out since Warsan Shire.

—— Symeon Brown

A fast-paces, dense, poetic, original and bewitching story by an important new writer. That Reminds Me will long be remembered by readers.

—— Alain Mabanckou

Deserves the same recognition that greeted Max Porter's similarly constructed fictionalised memoir Grief is the Thing With Feathers... uses its broken-up style to explore experiences that defy easy comprehension. There is nothing indulgent about this quietly observed account of a black man Owusu gives the name of K... There is a physicality to his writing, the impression of incoherent feelings being wrestled into shape, that lends his book heft. K's future is, in the end, ambiguous, but Owusu's surely gleams bright.

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

A bold prose poem written in novella form, That Reminds Me is one of the most powerful pieces of writing to be published in 2019.

—— Foyles

The latest release from Stormzy's increasingly impressive #Merky imprint, this is a stylistically ambitious memoir of a precarious Tottenham upbringing. Owusu writes with a poet's gift for seemingly incidental observation in a potent story that's left deliberately, troublingly fragmented.

—— Metro

A virtuosic debut by a raw new talent. An honest and timely evaluation of a black man's struggle to belong and later come to terms with failing mental health. Utterly convincing and deeply sad, Owusu's storytelling will bring readers to tears.

—— Scarlett Sangster , The Irish News

Derek Owusu is not just a brilliant writer, he’s a deep thinker. Anything he does is relevant, and meaningful. It would be easy to say that he is mainly concerned with the condition of young black men, but in truth he speaks truth to all of us.

—— Benjamin Zephaniah

A magnificent achievement.

—— Paul Gilroy

Written with candour and verve, and full of moments of heart-stopping anguish and beauty.

—— Stephen Kelman

Beautifully written. O’Connor creates a vivid and vigorous world of his own

—— Andrew Taylor , Spectator

Beautifully written and gorgeously atmospheric

—— Best

A beautifully written masterpiece

—— SHEmazing!

A vividly written and atmospheric meditation on the creative process

—— Elizabeth Buchan , Daily Mail

O’Connor is masterly at evoking the late Victorian era; its train journeys, street scenes, formality and banter… O’Connor is masterly at evoking the late Victorian era; its train journeys, street scenes, formality and banter

—— Suzi Feay , Financial Times

Rich and vivid

—— Daily Telegraph

Joseph O'Connor has written an entertaining novel that combines narrative with transcripts of recordings, diary entries and other notes. It steeps viewers in the theatre of Irving and Terry in the late 1870s and beyond, providing much informative colour at the same time as delving deeply and frankly into a series of relationships that are generally convincing.

—— Philip Fisher , British Theatre Guide

O’Connor tells his story in rich and stylish prose

—— Jonathan Barnes , Times Literary Supplement

A rousing story about a remarkable woman

—— Neil Armstrong and Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer reads of 2019*

Joseph O’Connor’s vivid descriptive writing evokes Stoker’s memories of the post-famine Ireland of his youth and of Irving’s company’s fraught tours of America… [his] fine writing, his wit and sympathy create a richly enjoyable backdrop for some familiar characters

—— Lindsay Duguid , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*

Enthralling… Brings to teeming life the London of the late Victorian and Edwardian eras

—— Irish Times

Brilliant... alternately deeply moving and laugh-aloud funny

—— Peter Marshall , History Today

O'Connor's gift is to weave whimsical moments in between the complexity of relationships and people... a beautiful story

—— Tracey Steel , People's Friend

An ambitious celebration of friendship, theatre and the power of darkness, Shadowplay is chilling and dramatic in equal measure

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

A wonderfully evocative tale within a tale

—— Ben East , Observer

A thrilling novel, exquisitely contrived to show the characters whose loves and lives inspired Dracula. A great tribute, and a work of art. Deeply affecting.

—— Essie Fox

I adored According to YES. It's so different to anything I've read in forever, so charming, wise, brilliantly written. I loved it all

—— Marian Keyes

Witty and wise, it'll have you burning the midnight oil. A cracker

—— Woman's Weekly

Very funny and packs an emotional clout. Brilliant!

—— Heat

An enlightening and feel-good read offering a fresh look at life and how to embrace it. Funny and enjoyable to the end

—— We Love This Book

There is lots of fun to be had reading this book. It's impossible not to warm to Rosie, a funny and open-hearted woman who acts as a salve and comfort blanket for this unhappy, inhibited family. There's something quite joyous about the way she unashamedly romps her way through the novel, changing the lives of those around her for the better

—— Express

Another hilarious novel!

—— Bella

French can spin a yarn . . . which sets According to YES apart. Think the vicar of Dibley, without the dog collar. YES YES YES indeed

—— Independent

Wise and poignant

—— Beyond the Joke

Heart-warming

—— Choice Magazine
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