Best of Friends

The New Novel from the Winner of the Women's Prize for Fiction

English language

Published March 23, 2022 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

ISBN:
978-1-5266-4769-6
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (2 reviews)

A dazzling new novel of friendship, identity and the unknowability of other people - from the international bestselling author of Home Fire, winner of the Women's Prize for Fiction Sometimes it was as though the forty years of friendship between them was just a lesson in the unknowability of other people… Maryam and Zahra. In 1988 Karachi, two fourteen-year-old girls are a decade into their friendship, sharing in-jokes, secrets and a love for George Michael. As Pakistan's dictatorship falls and a woman comes to power, the world suddenly seems full of possibilities. Elated by the change in the air, they make a snap decision at a party. That night, everything goes wrong, and the two girls are powerless to change the outcome. Zahra and Maryam. In present-day London, two influential women remain bound together by loyalties, disloyalties, and the memory of that night, which echoes through the present in unexpected …

4 editions

A novel of two halves

4 stars

Best Of Friends is written as a novel in two halves, the first of which is set in 1980s Karachi when Maryam and Zahra are both fourteen years old. The second half jumps to present day London, some thirty years later, when the girls are now highly successful women and the balance of power within their friendship is noticeably different.

In common with many other reviewers I did feel I connected more strongly with the teenage girls. Karachi really springs to life from the pages and I could easily envisage the girls' homes and school, and the differences between Maryam's wealthy family and Zahra's more comfortably off situation. What interested me particularly about this period though were that there were already unspoken rifts between Zahra and Maryam, it was just that they weren't seen as problems in the same way as they would become. Maryam is already very aware of …

Subjects

  • English literature