SJ Bradley

SJ Bradley is a novelist, short story writer and radio scriptwriter from Leeds, known for her diverse contributions to contemporary British fiction. Her work spans novels, short stories and audio drama, demonstrating her versatility across different forms of storytelling: Bradley's latest short story collection, Maps of Imaginary Towns (2024).

SJ Bradley was born and raised in Leeds. Her fiction has appeared in various magazines and anthologies, including New Willesden Short Stories 7, Queen Mobs, Litro Magazine and Untitled Books. She debuted with Brick Mother (2014) and her second novel, Guest (2017).

Her latest work, Maps of Imaginary Towns (2024), is an inventive collection of short stories that transports readers into vividly rendered worlds. From a futuristic colony where a woman dreams of rockets to a drab estate where a girl discovers magic, Bradley's stories explore the quiet desperation and heroism of seemingly ordinary lives.

Her experiences working in the public and charitable sectors inspired many of these stories: "I wanted to write about the buildings that were closing, the services that were being cut and the struggles that people were facing," she said in an interview.

In addition to her writing, SJ Bradley is developing an audio drama series, Uneasy Listening, which will be released in early 2025. She is also an active arts organiser, curating literary events such as Fictions of Every Kind and The Northern Short Story Festival.

Photo credit: X @bradleybooks

Quotes

Ngọc Hảo Đỗhas quotedlast month
streets down.

He went, knocked on the door, and her nut-wrinkled face appeared, screwed up in the crack. She was old, about eighty. “Can you mind Hana today?” he asked.

Looked through the gap into the hallway, and through tha
Ngọc Hảo Đỗhas quotedlast month
she said. Slammed the door. On the other side, bolt and chain rattled as though telling a story. Then she opened it, the sun spiking into her eyes. “Ok. Give her here.”

The civic hall was grey, broad, and didn’t seem to want him there. It was double the footprint of a secondary school, only one storey
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