Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow
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Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow is a British writer whose debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. Her work is informed by her background as an autistic woman and activities supporting people with autism; her writing is noted for its introspective tone and lyrical style.
Lloyd-Barlow obtained her PhD in creative writing from the University of Kent, with Amy Sackville serving as her doctoral adviser.[1] Lloyd-Barlow's debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was developed as a result of her PhD studies.[1]
The novel tells of a friendship that develops between Sunday, an autistic woman living in a Lake District home, and her newly arrived eccentric neighbor Vita, who emigrated from London with her husband Rollo. The friendship between the two women eventually sours as Sunday's daughter Dolly begins to favor the relationship with Vita while neglecting her mother.
James Smart, writing for The Guardian, described the work as a "tightly focused story, set almost entirely in two neighbouring houses on a quiet street, that's also a gleeful skewering of social codes, a raw portrait of family life and a revealing account of neurodivergence."[2]
She became the first autistic author to be nominated for a Booker Prize with the novel's longlisting in 2023.[3]