
British author and academic (1959-)
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Bernardine Anne Mobolaji Evaristo (born 28 May 1959) is an English author and Professor of Creative Writing at Brunel University of London. She is Visiting Professor of Creative Media 2025/6 at the University of Oxford. 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. The novel won many other awards including two British Book awards (aka "Nibbies"). In 2025, Evaristo was selected from among all previous Women's Prize for Fiction winners and nominees as the recipient of the Women's Prize Outstanding Contribution Award, a one-off literary honour to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Women's Prize for Fiction. She served for four years as President of the Royal Society of Literature, the second woman and the first Black or Asian person to hold the role since it was founded in 1820. She was elected President Emerita once her tenure was completed in 2025.
Evaristo is a longstanding advocate and activist for the inclusion of writers and artists. 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 founded the Brunel International African Poetry Prize, 2012–2022, which in 2023 became the Evaristo African Poetry Prize with the African Poetry Book Fund, and she founded The Complete Works mentoring scheme for poets of colour, 2007–2017. In 2021 she founded the Sky Arts Mentoring Award for writers with the Royal Society of Literature (RSL) and in 2024, she founded the RSL Scriptorium Awards, offering her cottage as a place to write for 10 struggling UK writers a year on the Kent coast for up to a month each, in partnership with the RSL. In 2021 she founded and became the curator of the Black Britain: Writing Back series with Hamish Hamilton/Penguin Random House, bringing out-of-circulation books back into print. Thirteen books have been republished to date. In 2025, she founded the RSL Pioneer Prize, to be awarded to a different woman writer aged over 60 every year for ten years, the first winner was Maureen Duffy in 2025. The Pioneer Prize is funded by Evaristo's donation of the £100,000 she herself won from the Women's Prize Outstanding Contribution Award in 2025.
5 total works indexed
· 2010 · cited 2,293x
· 2018 · cited 1,075x
· 2005 · cited 954x
· 2005 · cited 600x
· 2019 · cited 578x
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