Bernardine Evaristo, MBE, is the award-winning author of eight
books of fiction and verse fiction that explore aspects of the
African diaspora.
Her novel Girl, Woman, Other made her the first black woman to win
the Booker Prize in 2019, as well winning the Fiction Book of the
Year Award at the British Book Awards in 2020, where she also won
Author of the Year, and the Indie Book Award. She also became the
first woman of colour and black British writer to reach No.1 in the
UK paperback fiction chart in 2020.
In 2025 she was awarded the Women's Prize Outstanding Contribution
Award. Her other awards and honours include an MBE in 2009 and an
OBE in 2020. Her writing spans reviews, essays, drama and radio,
and she has edited and guest-edited national publications,
including The Sunday Time's Style magazine.
Bernardine is Professor of Creative Writing at Brunel University,
London, and President of the Royal Society of Literature. She lives
in London with her husband.
www.bevaristo.com
Bernardine Evaristo can take any story from any time and turn it
into something vibrating with life
*Ali Smith*
This riproaring, full-bodied riff on sex, secrecy and family is
Bernardine Evaristo's seventh book. If you don't yet know her work,
you should - she says things about modern Britain that no one else
does
*Guardian*
Transforms our often narrow perceptions of gay men in England . . .
Comical, agonising and, ultimately, moving
*Independent*
Evaristo has a lot going on in this unusual urban romance, but
beneath her careful study of race and sexuality is a beautiful love
story. Not many writers could have two old men having sexual
intercourse in a bedsit to a soundtrack of Shabba Ranks's Mr
Loverman and save it from bad taste, much less make it sublime. But
the hero of this book, and his canny creator, make everything taste
just fine
*Daily Telegraph*
An undeniably bold and energetic writer, whose world view is
anything but one-dimensional
*Sunday Times*
Audacious genre-bending, in-yer-face wit and masterly retellings of
underwritten corners of history are the hallmarks of Evaristo's
wit
*New Statesman*
Heartbreaking yet witty, this is a story that needed to be told
*Observer*
I loved this novel. Barrington is flamboyant, complex and in love
with his childhood friend Morris. It really makes you think of all
the stories, forbidden and forgotten, from the elders who made
England their home
*Guardian*
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