Bernardine Evaristo



Bernardine Evaristo, MBE FRSL FRSA, FEA (born 28 May 1959) is a British novelist.

Quotes

 * I wanted to put presence into absence. I was very frustrated that black British women weren't visible in literature. I whittled it down to 12 characters – I wanted them to span from a teenager to someone in their 90s, and see their trajectory from birth, though not linear. There are many ways in which otherness can be interpreted in the novel – the women are othered in so many ways and sometimes by each other. I wanted it to be identified as a novel about women as well.
 * On her novel Girl, Woman, Other in "Bernardine Evaristo: 'I want to put presence into absence'", The Guardian (27 April 2019).


 * With all of my books I'm interested in where people come from in relation to who they are.
 * On her writing interests in "Bernardine Evaristo: 'I want to put presence into absence'", The Guardian (27 April 2019).


 * I have a term I came up with called fusion fiction – that's what it felt like, with the absence of full stops, the long sentences. The form is very free-flowing and it allowed me to be inside the characters' heads and go all over the place – the past, the present. For me, there's always a level of experimentation – I'm not happy writing what we might call traditional novels.
 * On what she calls her writing style in "Bernardine Evaristo: 'I want to put presence into absence'", The Guardian (27 April 2019).


 * I'm not interested in any stereotypes whatsoever.
 * On how she realizes her characters in "Bernardine Evaristo interview: 'I'm not interested in any stereotypes whatsoever'", The Telegraph (16 October 2019).