Six Blake Friedmann titles make the illustrious New York Times ‘Best Books since 2000’ list

Six Blake Friedmann titles have been included in The New York Times ‘Best Books since 2000’ list.

A compilation of their annual ‘Best Books’ lists from every year since 2000, the ‘Best Books since 2000’ list comprises of 3,228 titles and celebrates the best books (according to the New York Times) regardless of genre, form or subject matter. It is noteworthy how many titles highlighted in these annual lists have gone on to be international bestsellers and / or achieve classic status.

We are delighted that the following Blake Friedmann authors and titles have made the selection.

Graeme Macrae Burnet’s Booker-longlisted novel CASE STUDY made the 2022 list and WINTERTON BLUE by Trezza Azzopardi was included in 2007. Zakes Mda has two titles on the list – his memoir SOMETIMES THERE IS A VOID (2012) and THE HEART OF REDNESS (2002) – while VINDICATION: A LIFE OF MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT by Lyndall Gordon appeared in the 2005 list and the million-copy bestseller STAR OF THE SEA by Joseph O’Connor was highlighted for 2003.

WINTERTON BLUE by Booker-shortlisted author Trezza Azzopardi was first published in 2007 by Picador in the UK and by Grove Atlantic in the US. It was longlisted for the Wales Book of the Year award and is at once a powerful love story and an intricately plotted mystery that explores the staying power of family and memory, and the pull of unlikely but destined romance. ‘Azzopardi uses her visual imagination to conjure scenes of humor as well as heartbreak.’

CASE STUDY by Graeme Macrae Burnet was published in 2021 by Saraband Books in the UK, and listed for  prizes including the 2023 Dublin Literary Award and the 2022 Gordon Burn Prize. To date, rights have been sold in 18 countries, with Text publishing in Australia and Biblioasis in North America. Through a series of notebooks, the novel follows the story of a young woman who, convinced that the psychotherapist Arthur Collins Braithwaite is responsible for her sister’s suicide, assumes a fake identity and presents herself to him as a patient so she can find out the truth about her sister. Saraband, Biblioasis and Text are set to publish Graeme’s next novel, A CASE OF MATRICIDE, in October 2024, concluding his popular Inspector Gorski trilogy.

Lyndall Gordon’s VINDICATION: A LIFE OF MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT explores the life of a woman often criticised by biographers, historians and feminists alike. Gordon challenges such opinions, and portrays instead the genius of this extraordinary woman. A New York Times bestseller, VINDICATION: A LIFE OF MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT is published by Virago in the UK and by HarperCollins in the US, and made the longlist for the 2005 Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction.

Zakes Mda’s SOMETIMES THERE IS A VOID and THE HEART OF REDNESS were published by Farrar Straus and Giroux in the US. The latter is often cited as one of South Africa’s Top Ten classics and is a novel of great scope and deep human feeling, of passion and reconciliation, bringing together the story of South African village life with a notorious episode from the country's past. Zakes Mda’s acclaimed memoir SOMETIMES THERE IS A VOID is often disarmingly candid. It weaves together past and present to give an intensely personal story of his development in life, love, learning and literature, and the events and people who shaped him.

Joseph O’Connor’s international bestseller STAR OF THE SEA is set on a ship fleeing the aftermath of the Irish Famine. It was published by Harvill Secker in the UK and by Harcourt Brace in the US, and has been translated into 38 languages. It won France’s Prix Millepages, Italy’s Premio Acerbi, the Irish Post Award for Fiction, the Nielsen Bookscan Golden Book Award, an American Library Association Award, the Hennessy/Sunday Tribune Hall of Fame Award, and the Prix Litteraire Zepter for European Novel of the Year. Joseph is currently working on his next novel, THE GHOSTS OF ROME, the sequel to MY FATHER’S HOUSE, due to be published by Harvill Secker in the UK and Europa in the US in early 2025.

 

Photo credit: Rosie Johnson

About Trezza Azzopardi

Trezza Azzopardi was born and grew up in Cardiff. She has an MA in Film Studies from The University of Derby, and in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia, where she now teaches.

Trezza has written four novels: her first, THE HIDING PLACE, won the 2001 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize; REMEMBER ME (2004) and WINTERTON BLUE (2007), were both listed for the Wales Book of the Year. Her latest novel, THE SONG HOUSE, was serialised on BBC Radio 4. Her novella THE TIP OF MY TONGUE, based on one of the tales from The Mabinogion, was published in October 2013.

She also writes short stories, which have been widely anthologized, essays, and occasional pieces for radio. Her work has been translated into twenty languages.

 Praise for WINTERTON BLUE

‘This is an astute book by a precise writer who knows how to entertain while grappling with love and loss.’ – The Sunday Times

‘Beguiling… a novel marked by poetic delicacy.’ – The Times Literary Supplement

Follow Trezza on X (previously Twitter).

 

Photo credit: Euan Anderson

About Graeme Macrae Burnet

Graeme Macrae Burnet was brought up in Kilmarnock, Ayrshire and now lives in Glasgow. He has also lived in the Czech Republic, France, Portugal and London and has appeared at festivals and events all over the world. His first novel, THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ADÈLE BEDEAU (Saraband, 2014), received a New Writer’s Award from the Scottish Book Trust and was longlisted for the Waverton Good Read Award. HIS BLOODY PROJECT (Saraband, 2015) won the Saltire Society Fiction Book of the Year Award, and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the LA Times Book Awards. A second Inspector Gorski novel, THE ACCIDENT ON THE A35, was published in 2017 and the third in the series, A CASE OF MATRICIDE is due to be published later this year.

 Praise for CASE STUDY

‘Burnet’s triumph is that it’s a page-turning blast, funny, sinister and perfectly plotted so as to reveal – or withhold – its secrets in a consistently satisfying way. It also does a fine job of keeping our sympathies shifting, and of conjuring up a lost cultural era. Rarely has being constantly wrong-footed been so much fun.’ – James Walton, The Times

‘A novel of mind-bending brilliance. Graeme Macrae Burnet is a master of muddying the waters, of troubling ideas of truth and identity, fiction and documentary, and CASE STUDY shows him at the height of his powers.’ – Hannah Kent

Visit Graeme’s website.

Follow Graeme on X (previously Twitter) and Instagram.

 

Photo credit: Nina Hollington

About Lyndall Gordon

A much-celebrated biographer, Lyndall Gordon lives in Oxford. Her ability to make the subjects of her biographies come vividly to life has won her many literary awards, including the Cheltenham Prize and the James Tait Black prize. She has also been longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize and shortlisted for the Duff Cooper Prize and the Comisso Prize.

Praise for VINDICATION: A LIFE OF MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT

‘A riveting page-turner… The reader is drawn directly into Mary Wollstonecraft’s struggle… From this beautifully written book, Wollstonecraft emerges as a triumphant success, despite all adversity and slights of fate… Lyndall Gordon’s biographical method is exciting.’ – Ruth Scurr, The Times

‘Wonderful and deeply sobering… Lyndall Gordon relates Wollstonecraft’s story with the same potent mixture of passion and reason her subject personified.’ – New York Times Book Review

Visit Lyndall’s website.

 

Photo credit: Sal Idriss

About Zakes Mda

Zakes Mda is an acclaimed novelist, playwright and painter. He divides his time between South Africa and his work as Professor of Creative Writing at Ohio University. He has been the recipient of major awards including the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, the Sunday Times Fiction Prize, the Commonwealth Writer’s Prize and South African Silver Order of Ikhamanga for Excellence in Arts and Culture.

Praise for SOMETIMES THERE IS A VOID and THE HEART OF REDNESS

‘Brilliant... A new kind of novel: one that combines Gabriel García Márquez's magic realism and political astuteness with satire, social realism and a critical re-examination of the South African past.’  – The New York Times Book Review

‘Mda’s electric honesty is a live current through his remarkably gorgeous, urgent, poetic, matter-of-fact memoir. But don’t get lulled into thinking this is just the book of one bravely truthful man’s journey into self-expression. Mda has shaken off calcification, identity, ego and walked us all into sovereignty and selfhood. Read this, and be prepared to examine your own soul as never before.’ – Alexandra Fuller, The Guardian

Follow Zakes on X (previously Twitter)

 

Photo credit: Urszula Soltys

About Joseph O’Connor

Joseph O’Connor was born in Dublin. His books include the novels COWBOYS AND INDIANS, DESPERADOES, THE SALESMAN, SHADOWPLAY and most recently, MY FATHER’S HOUSE. He has also published biography, short stories and has written several successful plays. He is the inaugural Frank McCourt Chair in Creative Writing at the University of Limerick.

Praise for STAR OF THE SEA

‘Spectacular… A vibrant, picaresque novel that tackles a vast, perilous subject with such aplomb that it raises the bar not just for O’Connor but for contemporary Irish fiction in general. The book is a triumph.’ – The Sunday Times

‘This is O’Connor’s best book. It is shocking, hilarious, beautifully written, and very, very clever.’ – Roddy Doyle

Visit Joseph’s website.

BFLA Authors in Best of 2017 Lists!

2017 is almost over, and as the year draws to a close, everyone is sharing their reading highlights in ‘Best of’ lists. At Blake Friedmann we are immensely proud that our authors have been featured in many of them. To celebrate their fantastic achievements we have compiled a summary of the great lists they were included with and the praise that accompanied their selection:

THE HUSBAND HUNTERS by Anne de Courcy

Jane Ridley, The Spectator, More Books of the Year 2017

‘Anne de Courcy’s THE HUSBAND HUNTERS reveals how the ruthlessly ambitious wives of American parvenus stormed the social heights of New York and London in the gilded age. A tale of buccaneering matriarchs marrying their American princess daughters to the dim-witted, cash-strapped sons of British peers, and using their new-found social cachet to force admittance into the exclusive New York elite. Cleverly researched, sparkling with diamonds and wickedly funny.’

The Mainstreet Trading Company, General Non-Fiction, Books of the Year 2017

 

DIKELEDI by Achmat Dangor

Books Live, Our guide to the best holiday reads

A family saga set in a time of forced removals and the creation of bantustans.’

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SHELTER by Sarah Franklin

Steph’s Book Blog, My Top Ten Books for 2017

‘The author does an incredible job of showing the way WW2 was fought in a different way. Yes, cities and soldiers do feature but only briefly. This is all about the foresters and how important and unnoticed their role was.’

What Cathy Read Next, Ten Favourite Books of 2017

‘An outstanding debut. SHELTER has an authentic period atmosphere with wonderful characters who take you on an intense but heart-warming journey.’

 

OUTSIDERS by Lyndall Gordon

Joseph O’Connor, Irish Times, The Best Books of 2017

‘I love how Lyndall Gordon thinks and I love the clarity and reach of her writing, combining imaginative audacity with scholarly scruple. Her OUTSIDERS, a collection of portraits of George Eliot, Emily Brontë, Virginia Woolf, Olive Schreiner and Mary Shelley, builds into a lucid meditation on how certain writers become lighthouses for each other.’

Joan Bakewell, New Statesman, Books of the Year 2017

‘As the role of women undergoes yet another convulsion, it’s good to read, in Lyndall Gordon’s OUTSIDERS, of the robust intelligence of five women who made a powerful contribution. The work and lives of Emily Brontë, George Eliot, Mary Shelley, Olive Schreiner and Virginia Woolf are well known. Gordon’s thesis sets out just how original and brave they were – and at what cost. We owe them much.’

Books Live, Our guide to the best holiday reads

‘A profound investigation into the lives and works of Mary Shelley, Emily Brontë, George Eliot, Olive Schreiner and Virginia Woolf.’

 

THE OTHER TWIN by L V Hay

Chapterinmylife, Top Reads 2017

‘I found myself immersed in this novel right from the very first page. Delightfully disorientating, chilling in its deception, THE OTHER TWIN burrowed its way into my brain’

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE LAST PILOT by Benjamin Johncock

Jenny Rohn, The Guardian, Favourite read of 2017 – as chosen by scientists

‘In Benjamin Johncock’s THE LAST PILOT, we fast-forward to a group of aviator engineers vying to break the sound barrier in the Mojave Desert. Every perilous flight might be a man’s last and family relationships suffer. Worse, their jobs become redundant when the first astronauts start going into space: if the pilots can’t beat them, should they join?’ 

 

 

 

SO HAPPY IT HURTS by Annelise Mackintosh

Ross McIndoe, The Skinny, Wreath All About It: Books Gift Guide

‘SO HAPPY IT HURTS feels like the natural evolution of Mackintosh’s style and skill… Written partially in answer to insipid self-help literature, SO HAPPY IT HURTS refuses neat solutions or easy platitudes. It is a book that can make you feel better, but not because everything will always be okay or because the world isn’t full of terrors. Happiness is something you have to fight tooth and nail for – SO HAPPY IT HURTS is a bruised and muscular battle cry.’

 

 

FEVER by Deon Meyer

Jon Coates, The Express, The Crime Time Best of the Year 2017

Barry Forshaw, Financial Times, Best Crime of 2017

‘An epic-length novel and a change of pace for Meyer, far from his customary state-of-the-nation South African thrillers. Nico Storm and his father undertake a nightmare journey through a devastated continent; they are among the few to survive a worldwide virus. Meyer justifies at every point the book’s length.’

 

 

ALWAYS ANOTHER COUNTRY by Sisonke Msimang

Taiye Selasi, The Guardian, Best Books of 2017

‘Sisonke Msimang’s ALWAYS ANOTHER COUNTRY is my favourite kind of memoir, so lyrical and dreamlike that it reads like a novel. It’s an artful meditation on exile and return, womanhood and motherhood unfolding against the backdrop of post-apartheid South African politics.’

Books Live, Our guide to the best holiday reads

‘One of the most searing voices of contemporary South Africa, this is Msimang’s candid and personal account of her exile childhood in Zambia and Kenya, college years in North America, and returning to the country in the ’90s.’

 

THE DEVIL’S HIGHWAY by Gregory Norminton

Robert Macfarlane, Resurgence & Ecologist, Books of the Year

‘I nominate Gregory Norminton’s THE DEVIL’S HIGHWAY, which I have read in advance of its publication this January. It’s a brilliant deep-time meditation on how landscapes hold – and conceal – meanings. The novel’s stories are set across three points in time, but always in the same place (a Roman road – the highway of the title – crossing southern England). It’s a powerful meditation on the damages – and the good – we have wrought, and will wreak, on the living world.’

 

THE MISSING WIFE by Sheila O’Flanagan

Amazon, Amazon’s 10 Best-selling ebooks

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHAT HAPPENED THAT NIGHT by Sheila O’Flanagan

Easons, Our Favourite Books of 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EXQUISITE by Sarah Stovell

Karen Robinson, The Times / Sunday Times Crime Club, The Crime Time Best of the Year 2017

Jake Kerridge, The Daily Telegraph, The Crime Time Best of the Year 2017

Stav Sherez, The Spectator, The best crime novels of 2017

Love Reading, Books of the Year 2017, June 2017 Book of the Month.

‘Wow! This is a cracking psychological thriller. Told in first person from two different viewpoints it causes...’

Chapterinmylife, Top Reads 2017

‘The narrative in EXQUISITE is intense, it is emotive and it delivers an insidious plot which wormed its way into my very soul. From the breath-taking beauty of the Lake District to the seedy bedsit land of Brighton, my imagination was captured from page one!’

Bonus - Must-read books for 2018

BOOKWORM by Lucy Mangan

Sarah Shaffi, Stylist, The 20 must-read books to make room for in 2018

'Stylist columnist Mangan has always been a reader, travelling from Narnia to Wonderland via Kirrin Island, learning about death from Charlotte’s Web and boys from Judy Blume. In BOOKWORM Mangan revisits her childhood reading - looking at the ways books shape our lives - picks a few forgotten treasures to inspire a new generation of bookworms, and uses books to tell her own story.'

 

 

 

 

THINGS BRIGHT AND BEAUTIFUL by Anbara Salam

Sarah Shaffi, Stylist, The 20 must-read books to make room for in 2018

'Bea Hanlon and her preacher husband Max are on a mission on Advent Island in the Pacific. The remote island is inhospitable, but to everyone’s surprise Bea gradually adapts to life on the island, and begins to enjoy herself, until the arrival of an unwelcome house guest - Marietta, who was the island’s missionary before the Hanlons arrived. Examining the true nature of religious missions and a marriage in crisis, this is a vividly drawn and powerful novel.'