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New Zealand’s North Island braces for Cyclone Vaianu with thousands ordered to evacuate Artemis II splashdown – in pictures Swalwell denies allegations of sexual assault as calls grow for him to withdraw from California governor race Trump news at a glance: Epstein survivors have words for Melania Trump after surprise statement Multiple people face charges, including murder, in California fireworks blast Rory McIlroy surges into six-shot Masters lead with stunning second-round flourish Roberto De Zerbi targets ‘Ange-ball’ revival to save Spurs from relegation Bath hit back to reach semi-final after stunning Northampton in 11-try epic Australia crash out of BJK Cup after Britain secure upset with doubles win Zebras, wealth and power: Hungary’s election tests Orbán’s grip on power ‘TikTok effect’ brings sellout crowds and younger fans to Grand National meeting King signs up David Beckham to his Chelsea flower show team The war over Omagh’s gold: the £21bn mine plan tearing a community apart Britain’s shadow workforce is paid as little as 65p an hour. Who cares for the carers? Tim Dowling: my wife is on a quest to restore my thinning hair SUVs are making Britain’s potholes worse, say scientists Blind date: ‘She claimed she was usually shy. I wouldn’t have guessed’ I’m a sauna person now: the Becky Barnicoat cartoon ‘I got everything I dreamed of – when I had no ability to handle it’: Lena Dunham on toxic fame, broken friendships and her ‘lost decade’ Six great reads: the man who let snakes bite him, masked heavy metal and the brutal reality for foreign students in the UK Meera Sodha’s recipe for noodles with rose beancurd, spring greens and egg Cuba’s doctors were a lifeline for the world. Now the Caribbean is shamefully complicit in the US drive to expel them An environmental disaster in Moldova has Russia’s fingerprints all over it ‘This is as important as your teeth’: are you skipping this key part of mouth hygiene? Man arrested after four die trying to cross Channel in small boat Ukraine war briefing: doubts linger in Kyiv over Moscow’s promise to uphold Orthodox Easter ceasefire Ichiro Suzuki statue unveiling goes awry as bronze bat snaps during ceremony Arrest of national war hero Ben Roberts-Smith cuts deeply to core of Australian psyche European football: Real Madrid held at home by Girona to extend winless run ‘You come back different’: how rugby players change after motherhood Human rights groups decry US plan for Guantánamo camp for Cuban migrants Potential US host cities for 2031 Women’s World Cup games mull withdrawal over Fifa concerns Arne Slot insists he is ‘aligned’ with Liverpool board and fans as squad is rebuilt Kamala Harris ‘thinking about’ running for president again in 2028 JD Vance warns Iran against trying to ‘play’ the US in peace talks West Ham double up twice to thrash Wolves and put Spurs in relegation zone Trump administration releases new renderings of so-called ‘Arc de Trump’ Bafta apologises for events surrounding John Davidson’s Tourette’s outburst Cocktail of the week: Bar Shrimp’s la rosita – recipe New drug may extend survival in aggressive ovarian cancer, trial shows One dead and 27 injured after bus with British passengers crashes in Canary Islands OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home targeted with molotov cocktail Alarm as acting CDC director delays report showing Covid vaccine benefits Argentina just ripped up its pioneering glacier law. 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Could force be the secret to supercharging your fitness? ‘Irresponsible failure’: Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft slam EU over child sexual abuse law lapse Blank canvas: what to wear with white trousers Critics assemble! Here’s my list of the greatest superhero movies of all time Amazon to finally launch Leo satellite internet in ‘mid-2026’, says CEO Pete Hegseth’s holy war: the militant Christian theology animating the US attack on Iran Toxic putdowns, brutal zingers ... and an unexpected love story – inside the joyful climax to brilliant sitcom Hacks Add to playlist: the beautifully dazed, countrified indie-rock of Tracey Nelson and the week’s best new tracks ‘I’m worried there’s too much of me,’ says a birch: inside the interspecies council giving nature a voice Dolce & Gabbana says co-founder Stefano Gabbana has quit as chair Why is anyone surprised by the US and Israel’s latest war? It’s only what the world allowed them to do in Gaza Super Mario what?! 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‘I wanted it to feel both Shakespearean and like Jay-Z’: debut author Sufiyaan Salam on masculinity, rap and meeting Stormzy
Emma Loffhag · 2026-05-03 · via The Guardian

On a stretch of Manchester road known for kebabs, shisha smoke and restless energy, three young men drive towards a night that already feels like it’s slipping out of control. The premise of Wimmy Road Boyz, the debut novel by #Merky books new writers’ prize winner Sufiyaan Salam, is deceptively simple: “three boyz drive and dream of an impossible night on an endless street”. What follows is anything but.

Salam’s novel unfolds over a single evening on the Curry Mile, that dense artery of Rusholme nightlife, where a white BMW carries Immy, Khan and Haris through a series of skirmishes, side quests and emotional unravellings. It’s a book about masculinity, violence and love, but also about language – how young British men speak, perform and fail to articulate what’s really going on inside their heads.

At 28, Salam is a standard-bearer for a new generation of literary novelists. He grew up in Blackburn, a town he felt at the time was “a where dreams go to die sort of situation”, shaped by racial tensions and deep deprivation. “It’s a very racially segregated place, and the ward I grew up in had one of the highest levels of child poverty in the country,” he says. Being brown and Muslim in post-9/11 Britain, he recalls a vague but persistent sense of otherness and fear. As a teenager, he wore a backpack with flowers on it, hoping it would make him seem less threatening. But his home town also gave him “this real mosaic of human life”, a range of experiences that now feed directly into his fiction.

Salam studied English literature at Manchester University, but writing for a living felt out of reach. “For me, it was never a thing that could be a career in the real world,” he says. “You just don’t even imagine that’s a possibility.”

His journey to publication was in the end borne of jealousy – Salam began writing Wimmy Road Boyz after attending a friend’s book launch in 2022 and thinking: “This should be me.” A short-story version came second in the Bristol short story prize, helping him pay his rent for a month. He developed it into a novel and faced rejections from agents. But then came the #Merky books prize, which Salam won in 2024 with the first 5,000 words of the novel.

Stormzy, who founded the imprint, made a surprise appearance at the ceremony. “It’s this weird thing where you’re like, ‘man, life’s about to change now’,” Salam remembers about that day. He recalls little of his encounter with the rapper, except for one detail: “He’s way taller than me, so I look very little in the pictures,” he laughs.

The following Monday he was back at his day job, working as a script writer for a children’s TV show at the BBC in Manchester, but now with a nine month deadline to finish his novel. Around the same time, he co-wrote Magid/Zafar, a short film set in a British Pakistani takeaway, which won best British short at the British independent film awards and was Bafta-nominated earlier this year.

This cross-disciplinary experience is clear in Wimmy Road Boyz: part play, part poem, part rap, it features an intermission, a chorus, stage directions, passages that veer into high literary prose before snapping back into slang. Salam describes the style as a deliberate fusion: “I wanted it to feel Shakespearean on one level and then like it’s a Jay-Z lyric on another. And I don’t see a contradiction between those two things.”

His influences are wide-ranging: “It was a mixture of Trainspotting, La Haine, and Kendrick’s good kid, m.A.A.d city,” he says. He remembers reading Ulysses just before a British-Pakistani rap concert. “I still had Joyce’s prose swirling around my mind,” he says. “And I was like, ‘oh, there’s something interesting here. If the word novel means newness, then let me try and do something new with it, reinvent it.’”

Written almost entirely in lowercase – a gen Z signifier – the language is maximalist and playful, rife with hyper-niche references – esoteric internet rabbit-holes, British-Asian youth subculture. Was he concerned about alienating readers by being too specific, too culturally dense? “I realised nothing really good comes from trying to compromise or self-censor,” he says. “I don’t think when Shakespeare was writing Hamlet, he was like, ‘man, maybe I should have set this in the UK instead of Denmark’. I’ve read Philip Roth, where there’s a lot of specific American Jewish slang that I don’t really understand. But you still get what’s going on.”

The result is a novel that feels as alive – original, ambitious and chaotic – as the night it depicts. There is a sense that Manchester itself is being written into literary existence, from a young insider’s perspective. One passage describes Rusholme as “a twisted, mycelium thing … what you’d get if you let postwar industrial architecture fuck a gothic forest”.

The book also grapples with broader themes around mental health, emotional repression, male vulnerability and queerness. “I was always interested in the things you inherit from masculinity – the idea of gender as a performance, which often gets talked about with women and trans people, but less so with men,” he says.

In fact, Salam traces the novel’s origins to a night out with friends during a period of personal turmoil. “I really wanted to talk to one of the guys about it, but I just couldn’t,” he recalls. “I was thinking, I’m having fun on the surface, but if you were to open my brain now, there’s all this madness going on.” The next day, he began to wonder: what if everyone else on the night out was feeling the same thing? What if none of them could say it?

He is wary, though, of turning his characters into symbols or moral lessons. One of his guiding principles was to reject the “good immigrant” narrative – the idea that stories about minority ethnic characters must be redemptive and respectable. “There’s no point writing something like this if it isn’t going to be honest,” he says. More broadly, he wants to show that identity is only one layer among many. “These are British men who are struggling with things … and these identity markers are just textured on top of who they are.”

Salam’s thinking about identity is inseparable from his own experience of race in Britain, though. More recently, that has taken more unsettling forms, with the renewed racial tensions and far-right extremism. A few weeks before he moved to London in 2024, race riots swept across cities in the UK – an Islamic cemetery in Blackburn, where his grandfather is buried, was vandalised. Salam found out via a viral video. “It’s wild that is happening when you’re just trying to live a normal life,” he says.

The novel also sits within a wider conversation about the absence of male authors in contemporary literary fiction, and declining engagement with novels among young men. “A lot of men just don’t necessarily gravitate towards literary novels,” he says. “Maybe the last novel they ever read is The Great Gatsby in school.” At the same time, he points out, many of those same men are deeply engaged with other complex, text-driven art forms. “When the Drake and Kendrick beef was going down, so many young men were analysing those lyrics – video essays deconstructing every line – and that is basically poetry on a huge scale,” he says. “A lot of men are engaging with literary criticism … it’s just the form has maybe moved on.”

Part of his ambition with Wimmy Road Boyz is to bridge that gap, to meet young men where they are, and create a novel that feels as immediate, as dynamic, as culturally embedded, as music. “Let it be as freewheeling as a conversation with guys on a night out would be,” he says. “I wanted it to almost have the feel of a podcast episode, just without being some toxic rightwing thing.” In other words, he says: “Let it be as messy as men are.”