Tahmima Anam Popular Books

Tahmima Anam Biography & Facts

Tahmima Anam (Bengali: তাহমিমা আনাম; born 8 October 1975) is a Bangladeshi-born British writer, novelist and columnist. Her first novel, A Golden Age (2007), was the Best First Book winner of the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prizes. Her follow-up novel, The Good Muslim, was nominated for the 2011 Man Asian Literary Prize. She is the granddaughter of Abul Mansur Ahmed and daughter of Mahfuz Anam. Early life Anam was born on 8 October 1975 in Dhaka to Mahfuz Anam and Shaheen Anam. At the age of 2, she moved to Paris when both of her parents joined UNESCO as employees. She grew up in Paris, New York and Bangkok, learning the story of the Bangladesh Liberation War from her father who said he took some training to fight in 1971 but East Pakistan became independent by then. Her father was not a shongram fighter. Education At the age of 17, she received a scholarship for Mount Holyoke College, from which she graduated in 1997. She earned a PhD in anthropology from Harvard University in 2005 for her thesis "Fixing the Past: War, Violence, and Habitations of Memory in Post-Independence Bangladesh." Later, she completed her Master of Arts in creative writing at Royal Holloway, University of London. Career In March 2007, Anam's first novel, A Golden Age, was published by John Murray. Inspired by her parents, she set the novel during the Bangladesh Liberation War. It was a finalist for the Costa First Novel Award. The novel tells the story of a woman named Rehana Haque during the Bangladesh War of Independence in 1971. She had also researched the war during her post-graduation career. For the benefit of her research, she stayed in Bangladesh for two years and interviewed hundreds of war fighters, known as shongram fighers. She also worked on the set of Tareque and Catherine Masud’s critically acclaimed film Matir Moina (The Clay Bird), which reflects the events during that war. Her second novel, The Good Muslim, published in 2011, is a sequel to A Golden Age and deals with the aftermath of the war. It was long listed for the Man Asian Literary Prize. In 2013, Anam was named one of Granta’s "Best of Young British Novelists". In 2015, her short story "Garments", inspired by the Rana Plaza building collapse, was published and won the O. Henry Award and was shortlisted for the BBC National Short Story Award. In the same year, she became a judge for The Man Booker International Prize 2016. In 2016, her novel The Bones of Grace was published by HarperCollins. The following year, she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Anam's op-ed pieces have been published in The New York Times, The Guardian and in the New Statesman. In these, Anam has written about Bangladesh and its growing problems. In 2021, her novel The Startup Wife was published by Canongate Books. It was selected as a Best Book of 2021 by the Observer, Stylist, Cosmopolitan, Red and the Daily Mail, and shortlisted for the Comedy Women in Print Prize 2022. In 2022, Anam gave a TEDx talk entitled "The Power of Holding Silence: Making the Workplace Work for Women". That same year, Anam's debut, A Golden Age, was chosen for the Queen’s jubilee book list, a list of 70 books from across the Commonwealth marking the seven decades of her reign. Personal life In 2010, she married American inventor Roland O. Lamb, whom she met at Harvard University. The couple has a son named Rumi. Rumi was born premature and for five years refused to eat – an ordeal Anam has written about. As of 2011, she lived in London. Bibliography Books A Golden Age. John Murray. 2007. ISBN 978-0-7195-6010-1. The Good Muslim. HarperCollins. 2011. ISBN 978-0-06-147876-5. The Bones of Grace. HarperCollins. 2016. ISBN 978-0061478949. The Startup Wife. Canongate Books. 2021. ISBN 978-1838852481. Short stories "Saving the World". Granta. No. Autumn. London. 2008. "Anwar Gets Everything". Granta. No. Spring. London. 2013. "Garments". Freeman's. No. Fall 2015. London. 2015. See also British Bangladeshi List of British Bangladeshis List of Muslim writers and poets References External links Column for New York Times Column for The Guardian Column for New Statesman. Discover the Tahmima Anam popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Tahmima Anam books.

Best Seller Tahmima Anam Books of 2024

  • The Bones of Grace synopsis, comments

    The Bones of Grace

    Tahmima Anam

    From the awardwinning, nationally bestselling author of A Golden Age and The Good Muslim comes a lyrical, deeply moving modern love story about belonging, migration, tragedy, survi...

  • The Penguin Book of Bengali Short Stories synopsis, comments

    The Penguin Book of Bengali Short Stories

    Arunava Sinha & Various Authors

    The prose short story arrived in Bengal in the wake of British colonizers, and Bengali writers quickly made the form their own. By the twentieth century a profusion of literary mag...

  • Letters to a Writer of Color synopsis, comments

    Letters to a Writer of Color

    Deepa Anappara, Taymour Soomro, Madeleine Thien, Tiphanie Yanique & Xiaolu Guo

    A vital collection of essays on the power of literature and the craft of writing from an international array of writers of color, sharing the experiences, cultural traditions, and ...

  • The Startup Wife synopsis, comments

    The Startup Wife

    Tahmima Anam

    Named a Best Book of the Year by NPR​In this “wise and wickedly funny novel about love, creativity, and the limitations of the techverse” (Vogue) newlyweds Asha and Cyrus find them...