Bernardine Evaristo Popular Books

Bernardine Evaristo Biography & Facts

Bernardine Anne Mobolaji Evaristo (born 28 May 1959) is a British author and academic. Her novel Girl, Woman, Other jointly won the Booker Prize in 2019 alongside Margaret Atwood's The Testaments, making her the first Black woman to win the Booker. Evaristo is Professor of Creative Writing at Brunel University London and President of the Royal Society of Literature, the second woman and the first black person to hold the role since it was founded in 1820. Evaristo is a longstanding advocate for the inclusion of writers and artists of colour. She founded the Brunel International African Poetry Prize, 2012–2022, and initiated The Complete Works poetry mentoring scheme, 2007–2017. She co-founded Spread the Word writer development agency with Ruth Borthwick (1995–present) and Britain's first black women's theatre company (1982–1988), Theatre of Black Women. Evaristo organised Britain's first major black theatre conference, Future Histories, for the Black Theatre Forum (1995), at the Royal Festival Hall, and Britain's first major conference on black British writing, Tracing Paper (1997), at the Museum of London. Evaristo has received more than 77 honours, awards, fellowships, nominations and other tokens of recognition. She is a lifetime Honorary Fellow of St Anne's College, University of Oxford, and an International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences. In 2021, she succeeded Sir Richard Eyre as President of Rose Bruford College of Theatre and Performance. Evaristo was vice-chair of the Royal Society of Literature (RSL) and in 2020 she became a lifetime vice-president, before becoming the RSL's president (2022–2026). She was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the Queen's 2009 Birthday Honours, and an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Queen's 2020 Birthday Honours, both awards for services to literature. Early life and career Evaristo was born in Eltham, south-east London, and christened Bernardine Anne Mobolaji Evaristo. She was raised in Woolwich, the fourth of eight children born to an English mother, Jacqueline M. Brinkworth, of English, Irish and German heritage, who was a schoolteacher, and a Nigerian father, Julius Taiwo Bayomi Evaristo (1927–2001), known as Danny, born in British Cameroon, raised in Nigeria, who migrated to Britain in 1949 and became a welder and the first black councillor in the Borough of Greenwich, for the Labour Party. Her paternal grandfather, Gregorio Bankole Evaristo (d. 1927), was a Yoruba Aguda who sailed from Brazil to Nigeria. He was a customs officer. Her paternal grandmother, Zenobia Evaristo, née Sowemima (d. 1967), was from Abeokuta in Nigeria. Evaristo was educated at Eltham Hill Grammar School for Girls from 1970 to 1977, and in 1972 she joined Greenwich Young People's Theatre (now Tramshed, in Woolwich), about which she has said: "I was twelve years old and it was the making of my childhood and led to a life-long career spent in the arts." She went on to attend Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama, graduating in 1982, In the 1980s, together with Paulette Randall and Patricia Hilaire, she founded Theatre of Black Women, the first theatre company in Britain of its kind. In the 1990s, she organised Britain's first black British writing conference, held at the Museum of London, and also Britain's first black British theatre conference, held at the Royal Festival Hall. In 1995 she co-founded and directed Spread the Word, London's writer development agency. Evaristo continued further education at Goldsmiths College, University of London, receiving her doctorate in creative writing in 2013. In 2019, she was appointed Woolwich Laureate by the Greenwich and Docklands International Festival, reconnecting to and writing about the home town she left when she was 18. In 2022, she was awarded the "Freedom of the Borough of the Royal Borough of Greenwich". Writing Evaristo's first book to be published was a 1994 collection of poems called Island of Abraham. She went on to become the author of two non-fiction books, and eight books of fiction and verse fiction that explore aspects of the African diaspora. She experiments with form and narrative perspective, often merging the past with the present, fiction with poetry, the factual with the speculative, and reality with alternate realities (as in her 2008 novel Blonde Roots). Her verse novel The Emperor's Babe (Penguin, 2001) is about a black teenage girl, whose parents are from Nubia, coming of age in Roman London nearly 2,000 years ago. It won an Arts Council Writers' Award 2000, a NESTA Fellowship Award in 2003, and went on to be chosen by The Times as one of the 100 Best Books of the Decade in 2010, and it was adapted into a BBC Radio 4 play in 2013. Evaristo's fourth book, Soul Tourists (Penguin, 2005), is an experimental novel about a mismatched couple driving across Europe to the Middle East, which featured ghosts of real figures of colour from European history. Her novel Blonde Roots (Penguin, 2008) is a satire that inverts the history of the transatlantic slave trade and replaces it with a universe where Africans enslave Europeans. Blonde Roots won the Orange Youth Panel Award and Big Red Read Award, and was nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award and the Orange Prize and the Arthur C. Clarke Award. Evaristo's other books include the verse novel Lara (Bloodaxe Books, 2009, with an earlier version published in 1997), which fictionalised the multiple cultural strands of her family history going back over 150 years as well as her London childhood in a mixed-race family. This won the EMMA Best Novel Award in 1998. Her novella Hello Mum (Penguin, 2010) was chosen as "The Big Read" for the County of Suffolk and adapted into a BBC Radio 4 play in 2012. Her 2014 novel Mr Loverman (Penguin UK, 2013/ Akashic Books USA, 2014) is about a septuagenarian Caribbean Londoner, a closet homosexual considering his options after a 50-year marriage to his wife. It won the Publishing Triangle Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBT Fiction (USA) and the Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize. In 2015, she wrote and presented a two-part BBC Radio 4 documentary, Fiery Inspiration – about Amiri Baraka, on BBC Radio 4. Evaristo's novel Girl, Woman, Other (May 2019, Hamish Hamilton/Penguin UK) is an innovative polyvocal "fusion fiction" about 12 primarily black British women. Their ages span 19 to 93 and they are a mix of cultural backgrounds, sexual orientations, classes and geographies, and the novel charts their hopes, struggles and intersecting lives. In July 2019, the novel was selected for the Booker Prize longlist, then made the shortlist, announced on 3 September 2019, alongside books by Margaret Atwood, Lucy Ellmann, Chigozie Obioma, Salman Rushdie and Elif Shafak. On 14 October, Girl, Woman, Other won the Booker Prize jointly with Atwood's The Testaments. The win made Evaristo the first black woman and first Black Briti.... Discover the Bernardine Evaristo popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Bernardine Evaristo books.

Best Seller Bernardine Evaristo Books of 2024

  • Mine Boy synopsis, comments

    Mine Boy

    Peter Abrahams

    'One of my alltime favourite novels.' Tsitsi Dangarembga'The first African novel in English to draw international attention.' New York Times'The forerunner of an entire school of A...

  • We Are Not Like Them synopsis, comments

    We Are Not Like Them

    Christine Pride & Jo Piazza

    A GOOD MORNING AMERICA BOOK CLUB PICK Named a Best Book Pick of 2021 by Harper’s Bazaar and Real Simple Named a Most Anticipated Book of Fall by People, Essence, New York Post, Pop...

  • The World According to Anna synopsis, comments

    The World According to Anna

    Jostein Gaarder & Donald Bartlett

    When fifteenyearold Anna begins receiving messages from another time, her parents take her to the doctor. But he can find nothing wrong; in fact he believes there may be some truth...

  • The Gift of Asking synopsis, comments

    The Gift of Asking

    Kemi Nekvapil

    As women, we are allowed to ask for more. We are allowed to ask for different. We are allowed to ask for better.And yet many women struggle to make requests that would help them, w...

  • Tenderness synopsis, comments

    Tenderness

    Alison Macleod

    "Powerful, moving, brilliant . . . an utterly captivating read, and I came away from it with this astonished thought: There's nothing this writer can't do." Elizabe...

  • Beloved synopsis, comments

    Beloved

    Toni Morrison

    Toni Morrisons bekanntester Roman in Neuübersetzung von Tanja Handels. Beloved, Toni Morrisons bekanntestes Werk und einer der wichtigsten Romane des 20. Jahrhunderts (The New York...

  • You Were Always Mine synopsis, comments

    You Were Always Mine

    Christine Pride & Jo Piazza

    The acclaimed authors of the “emotional literary roller coaster” (The Washington Post) and Good Morning America book club pick We Are Not Like Them return with this moving and prov...

  • Hine Toa synopsis, comments

    Hine Toa

    Ngahuia Te Awekotuku

    An incredible memoir by a trailblazing voice in women's, queer and Māori liberation movements'Remarkable. At once heartbreaking and triumphant' Patricia GraceIn the 1950s, a young ...

  • Black Rain Falling synopsis, comments

    Black Rain Falling

    Jacob Ross

    'Jacob Ross is a truly amazing writer. Black Rain Falling is an outstanding novel' BERNARDINE EVARISTO, WINNER OF THE BOOKER PRIZE'Jacob Ross is a unique and thrilling new voice in...

  • Menschenkind synopsis, comments

    Menschenkind

    Toni Morrison

    Ein großes Epos über die Sklaverei – der bekannteste Roman der Nobelpreisträgerin.Sethe die auf der Flucht aus der Sklaverei ihr Leben riskierte, ihren Mann verlor und ein Kind be...

  • A Black Boy at Eton synopsis, comments

    A Black Boy at Eton

    Dillibe Onyeama

    'The story [Onyeama] had to tell was so gripping and shocking, it wouldn't let me go . . . A remarkably wellwritten memoir' Bernardine Evaristo, from the IntroductionDillibe was th...

  • Alles, was wir uns nicht sagen synopsis, comments

    Alles, was wir uns nicht sagen

    Salma El-Wardany

    Drei beste Freundinnen. Viele ungesagte Dinge. Ein bewegender Roman über Freundschaft, Liebe und den Mut, eigene Wege zu gehen.»Humorvoll, tiefgründig und unbedingt empfehlenswert!...

  • The Lonely Londoners synopsis, comments

    The Lonely Londoners

    Sam Selvon

    Both devastating and funny, The Lonely Londoners is an unforgettable account of immigrant experience and one of the great twentiethcentury London novelsAt Waterloo Station, hopefu...

  • Daughters of Jorasanko synopsis, comments

    Daughters of Jorasanko

    Aruna Chakravarti

    The Tagore household is falling apart. Rabindranath cannot shake off the disquiet in his heart. His daughters and daughterinlaw struggle hard to cope with incompatible marriages, i...

  • The Orange Girl synopsis, comments

    The Orange Girl

    Jostein Gaarder

    From the author of SOPHIE'S WORLD, a modern fairy tale with a philosophical twist.'It should be read by all' VOGUE'My father died eleven years ago. I was only four then. I never th...

  • Death Trap synopsis, comments

    Death Trap

    Dreda Say Mitchell

    FROM THE BESTSELLING AND CRITICALLYACCLAIMED AUTHOR OF SPARE ROOM, GANGLAND GIRLS TRLIOGY and the FLESH AND BLOOD SERIESDreda Say Mitchell was awarded an MBE in Her Majesty The Que...

  • Ic3 synopsis, comments

    Ic3

    Penguin Books Ltd

    A celebratory 20th anniversary edition of A landmark collection from black writers across the literary spectrum'The fact that IC3, the police identity for Black, is the only collec...

  • How Much the Heart Can Hold synopsis, comments

    How Much the Heart Can Hold

    Carys Bray, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, Bernardine Evaristo, Grace McCleen, Donal Ryan, Nikesh Shukla & D.W. Wilson

    'Startlingly original stories.'S Magazine'Together they assert that love is more heartbreaking and transforming that the word necessarily conveys.'Observer Love is not a singular c...

  • Part of a Story That Started Before Me synopsis, comments

    Part of a Story That Started Before Me

    George the Poet

    "This is an anthology to contemplate, revisit and relish" LoveReading4Kids'It's time we told our story too. The melanin speaks for itself.' George the PoetPart of a Story That St...

  • Incomparable World synopsis, comments

    Incomparable World

    S. I. Martin

    A visceral reimagining of 1780s London, showcasing the untold stories of AfricanAmerican soldiers grappling with their postwar freedom 'Remarkable' David DabydeenIn the years just ...

  • Maud Martha synopsis, comments

    Maud Martha

    Gwendolyn Brooks

    «In den Händen einer der bedeutendsten amerikanischen Schriftstellerinnen erhebt sich das Alltägliche zu einem hinreißenden Porträt einer Schwarzen Frau.» Claudia RankineDie sensat...