Collins Modern Classics - Anita and Me (Collins Modern Classics)

By Meera Syal

The debut novel from the award-winning screenwriter of ‘Bhaji on the Beach’. The story of nine-year-old Meena, growing up in the only Punjabi family in the Black Country mining village of Tollington.

Blonde, sassy and rebellious, Anita Rutter is everything nine-year-old Meena wants to be. Growing up in the only Punjabi family in the village, Meena is desperate to break free from her parents. She wants fishfingers and chips, not chapati and dhal; she wants an English Christmas, not her family’s endless Diwali celebrations. And more than anything, she wants Anita to accept her into her gang.

But is a friendship with Anita Rutter really everything it seems?

A vivid portrait of a British childhood in the 1970s, Anita and Me is a novel rich with humour and compassion – a poignant story of immigration, adolescence and belonging.

Author: Meera Syal
Format: Paperback
Release Date: 23 May 2024
Pages: 320
ISBN: 978-0-00-870617-3
Meera Syal is a multi-award winning actor and writer; her screenplays include the films Bhaji On The Beach and My Sister-Wife, and the screen adaptations of both her novels Anita And Me and Life Isn’t All Ha Ha Hee Hee. Her TV work as a performer/writer includes the iconic comedy shows The Real McCoy, Goodness Gracious Me and The Kumars At Number 42. She wrote the book of the ground-breaking musical Bombay Dreams (London’s Apollo Theatre/The Broadway Theatre, New York).

”''Tom Sawyer' meets 'Cider With Rosie' en route to India via Wolverhampton. A wonderful book - treat yourself.” - Ben Elton

”'Funny, moving and packed full of wonderful surprises.” - Esther Freud

”'This is a funny, sad book. It made me long to be a kid again, yet grateful I’d grown up.” - Jo Brand

‘”Anita and Me” is full of pleasure. Syal is as skilful at rendering the saucy, ballsy backchat of the Tollington women as she is at describing Meena’s “uncles and aunties”, her parents’ Indian friends. The book is expertly structured and engagingly written, illuminated throughout by Meena’s ironical irreverance and robustness of spirit. I can give it no higher recommendation.’ Laura Tennant, Guardian -