A powerful exploration of the clash between society, friendship and power - from the international bestselling author of Home Fire, winner of the Women's Prize
Kamila Shamsie was born and grew up in Karachi, Pakistan. Her most recent novel Home Fire won the Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2018. It was also longlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2017, shortlisted for the Costa Best Novel Award, and won the London Hellenic Prize. She is the author of six previous novels including Burnt Shadows, shortlisted for the Orange Prize, and A God in Every Stone, shortlisted for the Women’s Bailey’s Prize and the Walter Scott Prize. Her work has been translated into over thirty languages. Kamila Shamsie is a Fellow and Vice President of the Royal Society of Literature and was named a Granta Best of Young British Novelist in 2013. She is professor of creative writing at the University of Manchester. She lives in London. @kamilashamsie
A defining novel for our times … An intimate study of the ties that
bind us
*Stylist*
A shining tour de force about a long friendship’s respects,
disrespects, loyalties and moralities. Shamsie never compromises.
This novel is of a rare quality, and even more evidence of her
ability to write fiction that’s simultaneously vividly alive to its
time and so good and true that it’s as if it has always been with
us.
*GUARDIAN, Summer Books 2022*
I loved Best of Friends by Kamila Shamsie– witty and painful, and
so sharp on the problem of love and politics
*Guardian*
An adolescent coming-of-age novel and paean to female friendship …
particularly excellent on the particularities of adult friendship
forged in childhood
*Independent*
A moving exploration of friendship and identity across ideological
divides
*GRAZIA*
A new Kamila Shamsie novel is always worth celebrating, but Best of
Friends is something else: an epic story that explores the ties of
childhood friendship, the possibility of escape, the way the
political world intrudes into the personal, all through the lens of
two sharply drawn protagonists
*OBSERVER, BOOKS OF THE YEAR 2022*
The spirit of Elena Ferrante haunts this tale of a friendship
forged in Karachi
*SUNDAY TIMES*
A profound novel about friendship. I loved it to pieces
*MADELINE MILLER*
It is a rare writer who can examine with such insight and
tenderness the forces that bind us to certain moments in life, and
do it in language that is both precise and exquisite, expansive and
attuned to the tiniest emotional detail. Kamila Shamsie has done it
again in this magnificent, profoundly moving novel. Best of Friends
is compulsive reading, and a reminder that in the end, the
strongest force is always love
*MAAZA MENGISTE*
A powerful story about friendship
*RED*
A compelling exploration of private and public lives in free fall
in 1980s Karachi
*IRISH TIMES, Books of the year*
The human heart can harbour deeply hidden contradictions. Here
Kamila Shamsie brilliantly unearths the darker emotions that can
live beneath the surface of a friendship - virtue laced with
venality and love poisoned with the sugared toxins of envy and even
hate. A disturbing and carefully crafted novel of rich
psychological insight
*BARONESS HELENA KENNEDY QC*
Friendship and power collide in Best of Friends
*GUARDIAN, BOOKS OF THE YEAR 2022*
A gripping portrayal of female connection
*FINANCIAL TIMES, Books of the year*
A twisting story brilliantly told
*EVENING STANDARD, Autumn highlights*
A haunting novel which asks big questions about justice, class, and
the borders of our moral selves, all wrapped around the deliciously
absorbing story of a childhood friendship that endures - fun,
complicated, the kind of friendship that feels elemental
*MEGHA MAJUMDAR, author of A BURNING*
Sophisticated and poignant … A moving portrait of two lifelong
friends
*KIRKUS REVIEWS*
A beautiful, enchanting story about friendship
*INDEPENDENT*
A story of power, identity and friendship … Told in lyrical prose,
Best of Friends is a compelling tale by one of today’s greatest
writers
*MONOCLE*
I devoured this novel. Both a stinging indictment of corruption and
prejudice in modern Britain and a nuanced portrait of
friendship
*The Bookseller*
‘Best of Friends has much the same premise as Ferrante’s Neapolitan
quartet: a friendship charted from girlhood to middle age, taking
in education, puberty, sex, ideological conflicts, personal
rivalries, intimate secrets …’
*Guardian*
Cleverly captures the competitive nature of even the closest
friendships … a beautifully crafted novel with excellent
characterisation, skilfully interweaving the personal and the
political throughout
*Daily Mirror*
The relationship between Maryam and Zahra captures the passion,
intimacy and depth of longstanding female friendships as well as
the hidden currents that sometimes take decades to rise to the
surface. The realities of life under dictatorship in 1980's
Pakistan is highlighted against the privileges and concerns of the
upper class. This is a magnificent and important novel by a writer
in full mastery of her powers
*Nadifa Mohamed, author of the Booker shortlisted The Fortune
Men*
Wonderfully realised. Shamsie captures the fizz and fissure of
teenage friendship, the rivalry and trust, the secrets shared and
hidden. … Shamsie’s observations about social media are clever and
incisive, as are those about Pakistani and English social mores
*Art Review*
PRAISE FOR HOME FIRE: The book for our times
*Judges of the Women's Prize 2017*
Home Fire has lit a light that'll never go out
*Ali Smith*
Her prose is propulsive and unfailingly elegant, and her eye for
detail is acute ... A brave and brilliant novel
*Sunday Times*
Managed to do all the things I want novels to do - tell me
something about the world, give me a tiny glimpse into the
otherness of others, and, most of all, give me that ache of longing
as I turned the last page and realised I would never meet these
characters again
*Observer*
Shamsie's writing resonates on the human, political and lyrical
plane but its topicality, tight plot and vivid characterisation
also suggest a film script in the making
*New Statesman, Books of the Year*
Elegant and evocative ... A powerful exploration of the clash
between society, family and faith in the modern world, tipping its
hat to the same dilemma in the ancient one
*Guardian*
Builds to one of the most memorable final scenes I've read in a
novel this century ... There is high, high music in the air at the
end of Home Fire
*New York Times*
Utterly contemporary and deeply original too
*Evening Standard*
One of the best novels of the year ... magnificent ... Insistently
intelligent without becoming didactic ... conveyed in prose of
stunning suppleness and economy ... Home Fire is everything
literary fiction should be - an exciting, beautiful, profound novel
of lasting value that deserves laurels
*Spectator*
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