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Monthly Archives: November 2024

27 11, 2024

The Reith Lectures : Current of Death -not imagined?

By Sylvia Vetta|November 27th, 2024|Categories: Events, Kennington, Novels and short stories, Oxford|0 Comments

Is violence normal ? In her 2024 Reith Lectures, Dr Gwen Adshead, addresses four questions that she has most commonly faced in her work as a therapist with violent perpetrators in secure psychiatric units and prisons: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0025cmg.  It’s not surprising

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6 11, 2024

Sanity in a Mad World? Memories of Colin Dexter and PD James.

By Sylvia Vetta|November 6th, 2024|Categories: Biography, History, Lost History, Oxford, Oxford Castaways, The Oxford Times|0 Comments

Today I weep for Ukraine and the environment. I really don’t understand my fellow human beings. What a terrible confession for an author! Many young black men voted for a racist. Many ‘Latinos’ voted for a man who builds a

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About the Author

As a writer Sylvia Vetta is best known in the Oxfordshire area for the 18 years she was a freelance writer on The Oxford Times and other magazines,  especially for her popular ‘Oxford Castaways’ series which gave her the opportunity to write the lives of  120 inspirational people from five continents. Her novels cross cultures but have impressive endorsements for their authenticity. ‘Brushstrokes in Time’ set in China and California wouldn’t have been possible without the three years she spent researching and interviewing Qu Leilei, a founder of the Stars Art Movement (Beijing 1979) who saved the life of the first leader of the Democracy Movement. It has been endorsed by China experts from Oxford, Harvard and Frankfurt and the poet Jenny Lewis says it is “Utterly mesmerising and unforgettable and among my top ten historical novels.”

‘Sculpting the Elephant’ set in Oxford and India, is close to her own life experience. Her Indian born partner Atam Vetta’s PhD was in Quantitative Genetics. She learned from him that each one of us is unique. Life has taught her that when you see your fellow human being as just that – a unique human being – and refrain from attaching labels you react with empathy. That is why she and one of her Oxford castaways, Nancy Mudenyo Hunt, have been able to co-author the novel ‘Not so Black and White’.

Recent Posts

  • The British Empire: a force for good or Colonial Holocaust?
  • Memories of Helen Peacocke: The importance of my talk at Headington LitFest on May 10
  • Build BRIDGES not WALLS or climb over them.
  • Peggy Seeger and Ruth Crawford Seeger
  • Memoir in all its variety.

Categories

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  • Letters to the press
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  • Madras Courier
  • Mixed relationships
  • Nalanda
  • Novels and short stories
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  • Shepherd.com
  • The Bodleian library
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  • The Stars ArtMovement

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