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See also
Mattituck Airport
References
External links
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Southold, New York
Census-designated places in New York (state)
Hamlets in New York (state)
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Census-designated places in Suffolk County, New York
Hamlets in Suffolk County, New York
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Populated coastal places in New York (state)
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Priya Basil (born 1977 in London, England) is a British author and political activist. Her work has
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been translated into over half a dozen languages, and her first novel was shortlisted for the
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Commonwealth Writers' Prize. She is the co-founder of Authors for Peace and an initiator of the
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movement Writers Against Mass Surveillance.
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Writing
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Her first novel, Ishq and Mushq, was published in 2007. Ishq and Mushq is a family saga which
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illuminates the problem of cultural identity for immigrants over several generations, and raises
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questions of memory, exile and self-rediscovery. Ishq and Mushq came second in the World Book Day
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"Book to Talk About 2008" competition. The novel was also short-listed for a Commonwealth Writers'
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Prize, and long-listed for the Dylan Thomas Prize and the International Dublin Literary Award.
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Her second novel, The Obscure Logic of the Heart, was published in June 2010. It tells the love
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story between the Muslim Lina and the secular Kenyan architecture student, Anil. The characters are
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caught in the maelstrom of socio-political problems as they try to negotiate between different
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loyalties – to family, faith, society and themselves.
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Priya's novella Strangers on the 16:02 is published on 17 February 2011.
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Basil’s work has been translated into Italian, German, Russian, Bulgarian, Brazilian Portuguese,
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Dutch, Croatian, and Serbian.
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In autumn 2014, Priya Basil took up the prestigious Writers' Lectureship at the University of
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Tübingen. She shared the honour with Chika Unigwe. Taiye Selasi, and Nii Ayikwei Parkes also gave
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supporting lectures.
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Basil's other writings have been published in The Guardian, and the Asia Literary Review, She is a
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regular contributor to Lettre International, the leading German-language literary magazine. Her
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themes include art, Europe, democracy, migration and (neo-)colonialism.
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Political work
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In 2010, Priya co-founded Authors for Peace. with the journalist Matthias Fredrich-Auf der Horst.
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It is intended to be a platform from which writers can actively use literature in different ways to
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promote peace. The first event by Authors for Peace took place on 21 September 2010, the UN's
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International Day of Peace. With the support of the International Literature Festival Berlin, Priya
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hosted a 24hour-live-online-reading by 80 authors from all over the world. The authors read from
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their work in a gesture of solidarity with those who are oppressed or caught in conflict.
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In September 2013, Basil signed the German novelist Juli Zeh's Open Letter to Angela Merkel. The
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letter criticizes Merkel's reaction to the Snowden revelations and demands a more robust response.
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Priya Basil read this letter aloud in public on the opening day of the International Literature
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Festival Berlin, as part of the festival's 'Berlin Liest' (Berlin Reads) initiative. Later, she
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helped organize, and took part in the anti-surveillance protest action 'March on the Chancellory',
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led by Zeh on 18 September 2013.
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Basil is also one of the initiators of 'Writers Against Mass Surveillance', a worldwide movement
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against mass surveillance that was launched on 10 December 2013. Basil is one of the group of seven
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international writers who wrote the appeal, gathered the first 560 signatures from world-famous
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writers, and organized the global launch of the appeal. The other initiators are Juli Zeh, Ilija
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Trojanow, Eva Menasse, Janne Teller, Isabel Cole and Josef Haslinger. The appeal was published
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through exclusive deals with leading newspapers in more than thirty countries worldwide, for
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example in Germany the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, and is also an online pledge at Change.org
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which the general public can sign.
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Basil continues to be active against mass surveillance. She spoke at Re:publica Berlin 2014, and
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has published essays and articles about the threat mass surveillance poses to democracy and
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individual freedom, including in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Der Tagesspiegel and the
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Danish newspaper Politiken.
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BücherFrauen, a co-operation of 800 Women from the German Publishing Industry, puts forward an
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annual list of female candidates for the prestigious Peace Prize of the German Book Trade. In 2013,
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2014 and 2015 Priya Basil was one of the 20-odd recommended writers on a list which included Hannah
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Arendt, Arundhati Roy, Nawal El Saadawi, Herta Müller and Juli Zeh.
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In 2017 Priya Basil, together with Ulrich Schreiber, conceptualized and co-curated the
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International Congress for Freedom and Democracy, which took place from 8–10 September 2017 as part
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of the International Literature Festival Berlin.
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Basil has written extensively on Europe and the future of the European Union, and has argued about
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the need for an official European public holiday across all member states. In 2017 she launched a
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campaign, which includes a petition on change.org, for the establishment of such a day. In 2018, at
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the invitation of Sonja Longolius and Janika Gelinek, directors of the Literaturhaus Berlin, she
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curates A European Holiday! – an event intended not just as a cultural extravaganza but as a
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political intervention – another step towards making the idea of such a day reality.
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Personal life
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Priya grew up in Kenya, returning to the UK to study English literature at the University of
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Bristol. She had a brief career in advertising before becoming a full-time writer.
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Basil now lives in Berlin. Wired called her "a British, Kenyan, Indian, German-resident
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fiction-writer. Priya is another of those contemporary novelists whose life wouldn't do within a
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novel, because it's simply too implausible".
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Bibliography
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Ishq and Mushq, 2007 (Hardback , Paperback )
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The Obscure Logic of the Heart, 2010 (Trade Paperback ; Paperback and )
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Strangers on the 16:02, 2011 (Paperback )
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Erzählte Wirklichkeiten: Tübinger Poetik Dozentur 2014 (Poetics lectures, in German, with Chika
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Unigwe, Paperback )
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Be My Guest: Reflections on Food, Community and the Meaning of Generosity, non-fiction, 2019
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(Hardback )
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External links
Videos
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Priya Basil On Reading and Writing
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Priya Basil "Heart – Bite"-Quotes The Obscure Logic of the Heart
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Priya Basil Strangers on the 16:02 – Train Rides 1–12
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Priya Basil "Literary Bridge" – a virtual Join me on the Bridge event initiated by Priya and
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Authors for Peace for Women for Women International in honour of the 100th anniversary of
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International Women's Day
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Reviews
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Brinda Bose on Ishq and Mushq, India Today (26 March 2007) "Spice Route to Soul"
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James Urquhart on The Obscure Logic of the Heart, Financial Times (8.7.2011): "Basil's novel is
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subtly played out; passionate and intelligent in scope."
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Eve Lucas on The Obscure Logic of the Heart, ExBerliner (June 2010): "Basil's maturity as a writer
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is newly reflected in characters whose emotional, ideological and political lives are closely
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intertwined-redolent of the complex personalities created by writers such as C.P Snow and Evelyn
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Waugh... Basil spans a large canvas of well observed and entirely credible third world nepotism
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against which Lina's work for a better world appears as a cry in the desert. Woven into the bigger
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picture are many small, luminous threads of conversational snippets, situational snapshots, the
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humdrum of life lovingly seen and recorded. The micro- and the macrocosm are bound together by all
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that happens in between and above all, in-between people. The book flows at all levels, but here,
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for me, is Basil's true strength: her interest in people, her sympathy with them, and the way she
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brings this to bear on her narratives."
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