Best of Friends, Kamila Shamsie
Best of Friends, Kamila Shamsie
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
Club: $10.00

Best of Friends

Author: Kamila Shamsie

Narrator: Tania Rodrigues

Unabridged: 10 hr 8 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 09/27/2022


Synopsis

“A profound novel about friendship. I loved it to pieces.” —Madeline Miller

“A shining tour de force about a long friendship’s respects, disrespects, loyalties and moralities.” —Ali Smith 

From the acclaimed author of Home Fire, the moving and surprising story of a lifelong friendship and the forces that bring it to the breaking point

Zahra and Maryam have been best friends since childhood in Karachi, even though—or maybe because—they are unlike in nearly every way. Yet they never speak of the differences in their backgrounds or their values, not even after the fateful night when a moment of adolescent impulse upends their plans for the future.
 
Three decades later, Zahra and Maryam have grown into powerful women who have each cut a distinctive path through London. But when two troubling figures from their past resurface, they must finally confront their bedrock differences—and find out whether their friendship can survive.
 
Thought-provoking, compassionate, and full of unexpected turns, Best of Friends offers a riveting take on an age-old question: Does principle or loyalty make for the better friend?
 
 
 

About The Author

Kamila Shamsie is the author of several previous novels, most recently Home Fire, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, was longlisted for the Booker Prize, and was a finalist for the International Dublin Literary Award, the Costa Novel Award, and the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, among other honors. She was raised in Karachi and lives in London.  


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jessica

This book is about the wrong thing. It's a bummer. The beginning is alive and interesting, deep in the friendship of two girls who have very different families and lives and personalities. It's clear, though, that the book is using this as set dressing. That ultimately it is going to take us to some......more

Kamia Shamsie’s last novel “Home Fire” was a worthy winner of the 2019 Women’s Prize, a slightly uneven but politically prescient novel which used the plot of the classical play “Antigone” to explore how the themes of that play (split loyalties to state/family, the rights and responsibilities of cit......more

Goodreads review by Ellie

3.75 This author can write and it was very compelling but by the end I felt it fell flat compared to the strength of the friendship theme it had in the first half.......more


Quotes

Praise for Best of Friends:

“Rich and deeply personal. . . .  In poetic prose, Shamsie details the small ways friends imprint themselves on each other: the secrets shared, the mutual pop-star crushes, the books passed between them, how a best friend can become a fixture in a family home.” —Los Angeles Times

“[A] captivating portrayal of two women trying to learn whether a once-treasured friendship can overcome differences.” —The Washington Post

“Unputdownable.” —Real Simple

“Sophisticated and poignant. . . . [brings] exquisite nuance [to its] depiction of long-lasting friendship.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Shamsie is superb at interweaving personal dilemmas and political realities. . . . Her continually surprising story, in which repercussions have further repercussions, vibrates with contemporary concerns, from social media privacy to immigration. The novel also wisely observes the enigmatic nature of longtime friendships. . . and shows how female power transforms over time. The protagonists will stay in readers’ minds long after this piercingly honest novel concludes.” Booklist (starred)

Praise for Home Fire:

“Ingenious and love-struck … builds to one of the most memorable final scenes I’ve read in a novel this century.” –The New York Times

“Urgent and explosive. . . near perfect. . . a difficult book to put down.” —NPR

“A haunting novel, full of dazzling moments and not a few surprising turns...Home Fire blazes with the kind of annihilating devastation that transcends grief.” Washington Post

“Achingly good. . . [and] shrewdly subversive.” —The New York Times Book Review