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Catch up on the literary sensation of the year with Booker Prize-winning Girl, Woman, Other
BRITISH BOOK AWARDS AUTHOR & FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR 2020
THE SUNDAY TIMES 1# BESTSELLER
'The most absorbing book I read all year.' Roxane Gay
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This is Britain as you've never read it.
This is Britain as it has never been told.
From Newcastle to Cornwall, from the birth of the twentieth century to the teens of the twenty-first, Girl, Woman, Other follows a cast of twelve characters on their personal journeys through this country and the last hundred years. They're each looking for something - a shared past, an unexpected future, a place to call home, somewhere to fit in, a lover, a missed mother, a lost father, even just a touch of hope . . .
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'[Bernardine Evaristo] is one of the very best that we have' Nikesh Shukla on Twitter
'A choral love song to black womanhood in modern Great Britain' Elle
'Beautifully interwoven stories of identity, race, womanhood, and the realities of modern Britain. The characters are so vivid, the writing is beautiful and it brims with humanity' Nicola Sturgeon on Twitter
'Bernardine Evaristo can take any story from any time and turn it into something vibrating with life' Ali Smith, author of How to be both
'Exceptional. You have to order it right now' Stylist
'Sparkling, inventive' Sunday Times
FROM THE BOOKER PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR OF GIRL, WOMAN, OTHER
LONGLISTED FOR THE ORANGE PRIZE FOR FICTION 2009
WINNER OF THE ORANGE YOUTH PANEL AWARD 2009
FINALIST FOR THE HURSTON WRIGHT LEGACY AWARD 2010
'A phenomenal book. It is so ingenious and so novel. Think The Handmaid's Tale meets Noughts and Crosses with a bit of Jonathan Swift and Lewis Carroll thrown in. This should be thought of as a feminist classic.' Women's Prize for Fiction Podcast
Welcome to a world turned upside down. One minute, Doris, from England, is playing hide-and-seek with her sisters in the fields behind their cottage. The next, someone puts a bag over her head and she ends up in the hold of a slave-ship sailing to the New World . . .
In this fantastically imaginative inversion of the transatlantic slave trade - in which 'whytes' are enslaved by black people - Bernardine Evaristo has created a thought-provoking satire that is as accessible and readable as it is intelligent and insightful. Blonde Roots brings the shackles and cries of long-ago barbarity uncomfortably close and raises timely questions about the society of today.
'A bold and brilliant game of counterfactual history. Evaristo keep[s] her wit and anger at a spicy simmer throughout' Daily Telegraph
'So human and real. Re-imagines past and present with refreshing humour and intelligence' Guardian
'A brilliant satire whose flashes of comedy make the underlying tragedy all the more poignant' Scotland on Sunday
FROM THE BOOKER PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR OF GIRL, WOMAN, OTHER
WINNER OF THE NESTA FELLOWSHIP AWARD 2003
'Wildly entertaining, deeply affecting' Ali Smith, author of How to be both and Autumn
A coming-of-age tale to make the muses themselves roar with laughter and weep for pity -- sassy, razor-sharp and transformative.
Londinium, AD 211. Zuleika is a modern girl living in an ancient world. She's a back-alley firecracker, a scruffy Nubian babe with tangled hair and bare feet - and she's just been married off a fat old Roman. Life as a teenage bride is no joke but Zeeks is a born survivor. She knows this city like the back of her hand: its slave girls and drag queens, its shining villas and rotting slums. She knows how to get by. Until one day she catches the eye of the most powerful man on earth, the Roman Emperor, and her trouble really starts . . .
Silver-tongued and merry-eyed, this is a story in song and verse, a joyful mash-up of today and yesterday. Kaleidoscoping distant past and vivid present, The Emperor's Babe asks what it means to be a woman and to survive in this thrilling, brutal, breathless world.
FROM THE BOOKER PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR OF GIRL, WOMAN, OTHER
The funny and fabulous tale of two twentieth-century misfits and their adventure into European history...
It is 1988, and Jessie, artiste, motormouth, ducker and diver, meets Stanley, angst-ridden banker and boffin. Jessie arrives like a guardian angel and lifts Stanley out of his soul-less life. He ditches his job, and together they set off across Europe. Destination -- unknown. Duration -- indeterminate. So begins an odyssey which turns into an adventure on the stage of European history featuring Shakespeare's "dark lady of the sonnets", Pushkin's African great-grandfather, the composer Chevalier de St. Georges and other colourful characters from Europe's past.
Treat a loved one to this joyful, big-hearted read from Booker Prize-winning novelist Bernardine Evaristo...
'[Mr Loverman is] Brokeback Mountain with ackee and saltfish and old people' Dawn French
WINNER OF THE JERWOOD FICTION UNCOVERED PRIZE 2014 and FERRO GRUMLEY AWARD FOR LGBT FICTION 2015
Barrington Jedidiah Walker is seventy-four and leads a double life. Born and bred in Antigua, he's lived in Hackney since the sixties. A flamboyant, wise-cracking local character with a dapper taste in retro suits and a fondness for quoting Shakespeare, Barrington is a husband, father and grandfather - but he is also secretly homosexual, lovers with his great childhood friend, Morris.
His deeply religious and disappointed wife, Carmel, thinks he sleeps with other women. When their marriage goes into meltdown, Barrington wants to divorce Carmel and live with Morris, but after a lifetime of fear and deception, will he manage to break away?
Mr Loverman is a ground-breaking exploration of Britain's older Caribbean community, which explodes cultural myths and fallacies and shows the extent of what can happen when people fear the consequences of being true to themselves.
FROM THE BOOKER PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR OF GIRL, WOMAN, OTHER
It's a hot summer afternoon. Tension is in the air. A gang of youths on bikes gathers outside a chip shop. A teenage boy is stabbed and left bleeding on the street.
The boy's mother wonders how this could have happened to her son. She is full of questions, but when the answers lie so close to home, are they really what she wants to hear?
In Mädchen, Frau etc. verwebt Bernardine Evaristo die Geschichten schwarzer Frauen über ein Jahrhundert zu einem großartigen Panorama und wirft damit zeitlose Fragen über Identität, Feminismus und Rassismus auf. Ein überwältigender Roman, der daran erinnert, was uns alle zusammenhält.
"Ein beeindruckender, leidenschaftlicher Roman über das Leben schwarzer britischer Familien, ihre Kämpfe, Schmerzen, ihr Lachen, ihre Sehnsüchte und Lieben."
Jury des Booker-Preis
Amma ist eine frischgebackene Dramatikerin, die sich in ihren Werken häufig mit ihrer Identität als schwarze, lesbische Frau auseinandersetzt und gerade ein neues Stück am National Theatre in London inszeniert. Ammas alte Freundin Shirley ist Lehrerin und nach jahrzehntelanger Arbeit an heruntergekommenen Schulen Londons niedergeschlagen und abgekämpft. Carole, eine von Shirleys ehemaligen Schülerinnen, ist eine erfolgreiche Investmentbankerin. Caroles Mutter Bummi, die in absoluter Armut in Nigeria aufwuchs und ihrer Tochter, als sie nach Großbritannien emigrierte, wohlweißlich einen englischen Namen verpasste, arbeitet als Chefin einer Reinigungsfirma. So unterschiedlich die Figuren und ihre Lebensentwürfe in Mädchen, Frau etc. auch sind, jede von ihnen sucht etwas... Voller Lebendigkeit und Humor zeigt Bernardine Evaristo, dass jede Generation für etwas gekämpft hat, das die nächste bereits als selbstverständlich ansieht. Auf einzigartige Weise führt sie die Berührungspunkte der Einzelnen zusammen und eröffnet uns damit einen völlig neuen Blick auf die Welt.
Stimmen zum Buch:
"Evaristo hat die Gabe, von ihren Figuren mit Sympathie und Anmut zu erzählen und dabei deren Anspruchshaltung sanft aufs Korn zu nehmen. Der lockere Ton und der Humor geben diesem Roman seinen Auftrieb."
The New York Times
"Komplex, scharfsinnig, schmerzhaft, witzig, aufschlussreich und vor allem unterhaltsam."
The Boston Globe
"Evaristos Fähigkeit, zwischen den Stimmen, Orten und Stimmungen zu wechseln, erinnert an eine außergewöhnliche Dirigentin und ihr Orchester."
The Paris Review
"Bernardine Evaristo gehört zu den Autorinnen, die von jedem gelesen werden sollten, überall."
Elif Shafak
"Bernardine Evaristo hat einen halben Booker-Preis bekommen, aber sie verdient den ganzen Ruhm."
The Washington Post
"Sprüht vor Vitalität"
Financial Times
"Der Roman des Jahres."
Washington Review of Books