logo
Women's prize for fiction 2025: Six experts review the shortlisted novels

Women's prize for fiction 2025: Six experts review the shortlisted novels

Daily Maverick2 days ago

There are stories about family, sex, history, death and fundamentalism.
From a longlist of 16, six novels have been shortlisted for the 2025 Women's prize for fiction. Our experts review the finalists (the announcement of the winner will be today, on 12 June 2025).
The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden
The Safekeep, a novel about the expropriation and theft of Jewish property during and after the second world war, revisits a dark chapter of Dutch history.
When Holland fell to Nazi Germany, many Dutch Jews were deported to the death camps and were stripped of their homes and belongings. Van der Wouden's debut novel shines alight on the act of keeping or maintaining things left behind that were to be reclaimed by their rightful owners, but which were lost or stolen in the war.
The trauma of this history hangs over the lives of three siblings grieving the loss of their mother in 1961.
Isabel, the novel's lonely protagonist, lives alone in the family house, keeping it in order as her late mother would have wanted. All the while she suspects that their maid is stealing from the kitchen. But following the arrival of her brother's girlfriend, Eva, Isabel discovers the truth of the house and attempts to right historical wrongs.
By Manjeet Ridon, Associate Dean International, Arts, Design and Humanities
Good Girl by Aria Aber
Aria Aber's debut is a frequently poetic and powerful künstlerroman (a novel that maps the development of an artist). It follows Nila, a young Afghan woman in Berlin, as she tries to escape from her own cultural heritage and that of the German city in which she lives.
For much of the novel, Nila moves through the margins of society, from her family home in a brutalist rundown apartment block in the neighbourhood of Neukölln to a seemingly endless cycle of underground clubs, parties and festivals. She pushes away her family, her childhood friends, and her college education to pursue an alternative creative life and a destructive love affair. Ultimately though, Nila realises that her artistic work and a truly independent life can only be forged through her reconciliation with the past.
Set against the real far-right violence of the 2000s, Aber makes clear how social inequalities and racial prejudices effect artistic access and creativity. She also acutely captures the tensions between freedom and tradition as experienced by bicultural Muslim women grappling with the expectation to be 'good girls'.
All Fours by Miranda July
'Everyone thinks doggy style is so vulnerable,' remarks one of the characters in Miranda July's latest work of fiction. This story takes sexuality as its subject along with its relationship with creativity and ageing – or more specifically, the midlife plunge from a cliff that is female menopause.
Like the author, July's nameless protagonist is 45, a successful artist, and married with a non-binary child. This auto-fiction puts the author's erotic nonconformity at the centre of the frame. Our heroine embarks on a road-trip to New York, but only 20 minutes from her home she falls in love with a young man. The pair spend two weeks together in a motel pursuing a mutual obsession, which ultimately remains unconsummated. This experience upends her life and she rebounds into turbulent adventures in sex, discovering a new sense of self.
Perhaps it could have been a little tighter than its 322 pages – but then again, it's a work that explores a capacious road to excess. All Fours is a funny, honest, rambunctious tale
Elizabeth Kuti, Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies
The Persians by Sanam Mahloudji
'Do they think we were just some refugees?' Shirin, one of the characters in The Persians, asks her niece Bita. 'Weren't we?' Bita replies. The question of what a refugee looks like and what kind of stories they are expected to tell is a central theme in Mahloudji's raucous, poignant novel.
The story shifts back and forward in time, from Tehran in the 1940s to Los Angeles in the Reagan years, and to both America and Iran in the 2000s, interweaving the voices of five women from the wealthy and powerful Valiat family. Mahloudji explores love, miscommunication, loyalties and betrayal across generations as well as between those who left and those who stayed behind.
Jewellery is a central theme in the novel: glistening in shops, hidden in suitcases or flung away in protest. It represents both the adornment of female identity and the weight of the history that the migrants carry with them.
Alexandra Peat, Lecturer in English and Director of the MA in Literature and Publishing
Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout
Tell Me Everything is the tenth novel in Elizabeth Strout's well-known series that sketches the lives of ordinary, yet complex characters, who enter and exit each other's lives in the nowhere town of Crosby, Maine. The three main figures in this latest instalment are 90-year-old retired schoolteacher Olive Kitteridge (recognisable from Frances McDormand's realisation in the award-winning TV series by the same name), middle age fiction writer Lucy Barton, and 65-year-old lawyer Bob Burgess.
Loosely, this novel can be described as a murder mystery, though the plot twist of an alleged matricide, and Burgess's decision to defend the case, are secondary to the three main characters' process of sharing previously untold accounts of forbidden, traumatic, guilty and unrequited love. It is this telling and memorialising that produces the emotional core of the novel. If sharing their past gives the ageing storytellers some respite from the burden of their hidden lives, it is not in the kind that comforts with meaning and purpose. In Strout's novel, this relief is unavailable and is replaced with the more ephemeral solace of simply being heard.
Fundamentally by Nussaibah Younis
At the heart of Fundamentally is the affinity that forms between narrator Nadia, appointed by the United Nations to rehabilitate 'Isis brides' in Iraq, and one of her subjects, Sara, an east Londoner on the cusp of adulthood.
They connect through a shared love of rollerblading, Dairy Milk and X-Men, as well as their caustic sense of humour. But the two British Muslim women have followed vastly different routes – Nadia to academia and the UN and Sara to a detention camp in Ninewah.
Nadia's story of her journey through the vagaries of the humanitarian sector, punctuated by flashbacks to her failed relationship with first love Rosy and fraught relationship with her mother, is told with a compelling mix of verve and vulnerability. It raises hard ethical and political questions along the way. But it is Nadia's mission to help Sara that gives the novel its emotional complexity and depth, drawing the reader in while denying us any easy answers.
Rehana Ahmed, Reader in Postcolonial and Contemporary Literature. DM
This story first appeared in The Conversation. Manjeet Ridon is a Associate Dean International, Arts, Design and Humanities. Éadaoin Agnew is a Senior lecturer in English literature. Elizabeth Kuti is a Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies. Alexandra Peat is a Lecturer in English and Director of the MA in Literature and Publishing. Yianna Liatsos is a Associate Professor in the School of English Irish and Communication. Rehana Ahmed is a Reader in Postcolonial and Contemporary Literature.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Piers Morgan shows love to Mzansi
Piers Morgan shows love to Mzansi

The South African

time5 hours ago

  • The South African

Piers Morgan shows love to Mzansi

Despite criticising President Cyril Ramaphosa in the past, Piers Morgan became a self-appointed South African as he cheered the Proteas on to win the World Test Championship on Saturday, 14 June. The national cricket team – led by captain Temba Bavuma – defeated Australia by five wickets in the final at Lord's in London. Ahead of the WTC, Avid cricket fan Piers Morgan surprised his X followers with a post that read: 'For the next 2 hours, I am South African. #Lords' The UK media personality added a South African flag emoji to his X post. After Mzansi's historic victory, Piers added: 'Brilliant win by South Africa… what a great Test match. Piers Morgan also praised Australia for being 'gracious losers.' Apart from the Proteas, Piers Morgan has previously congratulated the Springboks on their back-to-back Rugby World Cup wins in 2019 and 2023. When retired Bok Schalk Burger reminded him that South Africans were champions in both cricket and rugby, Piers jokingly responded: 'My liver can't handle the extra drinking that would entail. Whilst Piers Morgan has often praised South Africa's sporting abilities, he's also been quick to voice his opinions about politics. Last year, the outspoken journalist questioned why Cricket South Africa had removed U19 player David Teeger as captain for the World Cup. The move was in relation to the Jewish player's comments relating to the Israel-Gaza conflict. He posted on X: 'He tweeted: 'WTF!? Have they sacked him because he's Jewish? This is shameful moral cowardice'. Earlier this month, Piers Morgan also condemned President Cyril Ramaphosa's defence of the struggle song Kill The Boer and Julius Malema's decision to controversially sing it. Piers posted on X: 'Oh come off it, Mr President . It's literally a threat, and incitement, to kill'. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 . Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp , Facebook , X, and Bluesky for the latest news.

Jan Van Goyen to strike again
Jan Van Goyen to strike again

The Citizen

time2 days ago

  • The Citizen

Jan Van Goyen to strike again

Impressive debut winner to demonstrate his feature race potential Jan van Goyen was one of the lesser-known Dutch masters who painted during the 17th century. He was best known for landscapes in which some two-thirds of the painting was devoted to sky, producing a remarkable mixture of colour and white clouds. While he might not be as well known as the likes of Rembrandt and Jan van Eyck, based on the first run, his equine namesake has the potential to bring that name to the forefront of horseracing followers. Trained by Mike and Mathew de Kock, Jan Van Goyen could hardly have been more impressive when justifying betting support to make a winning introduction over 1160m at Turffontein on 3 June. The two-year-old son of Master Of My Fate was backed in from an opening of 7-1 to go off at the 3-1 and never looked like getting beaten as he romped to a 4.50-kength victory over Chapbook. Jan Van Goyen makes a quick reappearance at Turffontein on Sunday in Race 2, a Juvenile Plate over 1160m again, and there will have to be something special in that line-up to lower his colours. The fact that he will be running again so soon suggests two things. The first is that he took his last run well and the second is that a visit or two to Hollywoodbets Greyville for the two upcoming juvenile feature races — the Grade 2 Golden Horseshoe over 1400m on the Hollywoodbets Durban July card and the Grade 1 Premiers Champion Stakes over 1600m on 27 July – is likely. While two-year-olds do not get an official merit rating, the handicappers do keep unofficial ratings, and the debut performance of Jan Van Goyen was enough to get him a rating of 96. Callan Murray rode him on debut and he will be back in the irons on Sunday. Sean Tarry sends out Shadowfax in the same race and this grey son of One World ran reasonably well on debut. There is an old axiom which states that it's not how you start, but how you finish that applies to this colt. ALSO READ: Future Swing to cement his Durban July berth Also competing over 1160m at Turffontein, he was not in the race until the closing stages when he flew up last to finish a 1.50-length second behind Victory In Orleans. He returned with a scalp wound which could not have helped his cause but his time of 22.2 seconds for the final 400m is quite incredible. Shadowfax went off at 10-1 that day but that will not be the case this time and he stands out as the major threat to Jan Van Goyen and is the runner with whom to take Exactas. It is also worth noting that Richard Fourie has been engaged to ride him this time. Mike and Adam Azzie-trained Claw, a lightly raced and maturing son of Horizon, was rewarded for his consistency with a deserved last-start success and returns to the scene of that victory four weeks ago in Race 8, a MR 100 Handicap over 1600m. The four-year-old gelding was given a confident ride by reigning champion apprentice Kobeli Lihaba when winning over the same course and distance last time, and a subsequent three-point rise for that workmanlike success seems rather lenient, so should not halt the Azzie runner's winning momentum. There was a lot to like about the manner in which two-year-old filly Versace Onthetrack won last time. The former, a grey daughter of Danon Platina, confirmed the promise of her debut second by winning next time out over 1000m at the same venue and a step up to 1160m in the opener should unlock further improvement. She could provide bettors with some value in Race 1. NOW READ: Underworld plots a Durban July heist

Women's prize for fiction 2025: Six experts review the shortlisted novels
Women's prize for fiction 2025: Six experts review the shortlisted novels

Daily Maverick

time2 days ago

  • Daily Maverick

Women's prize for fiction 2025: Six experts review the shortlisted novels

There are stories about family, sex, history, death and fundamentalism. From a longlist of 16, six novels have been shortlisted for the 2025 Women's prize for fiction. Our experts review the finalists (the announcement of the winner will be today, on 12 June 2025). The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden The Safekeep, a novel about the expropriation and theft of Jewish property during and after the second world war, revisits a dark chapter of Dutch history. When Holland fell to Nazi Germany, many Dutch Jews were deported to the death camps and were stripped of their homes and belongings. Van der Wouden's debut novel shines alight on the act of keeping or maintaining things left behind that were to be reclaimed by their rightful owners, but which were lost or stolen in the war. The trauma of this history hangs over the lives of three siblings grieving the loss of their mother in 1961. Isabel, the novel's lonely protagonist, lives alone in the family house, keeping it in order as her late mother would have wanted. All the while she suspects that their maid is stealing from the kitchen. But following the arrival of her brother's girlfriend, Eva, Isabel discovers the truth of the house and attempts to right historical wrongs. By Manjeet Ridon, Associate Dean International, Arts, Design and Humanities Good Girl by Aria Aber Aria Aber's debut is a frequently poetic and powerful künstlerroman (a novel that maps the development of an artist). It follows Nila, a young Afghan woman in Berlin, as she tries to escape from her own cultural heritage and that of the German city in which she lives. For much of the novel, Nila moves through the margins of society, from her family home in a brutalist rundown apartment block in the neighbourhood of Neukölln to a seemingly endless cycle of underground clubs, parties and festivals. She pushes away her family, her childhood friends, and her college education to pursue an alternative creative life and a destructive love affair. Ultimately though, Nila realises that her artistic work and a truly independent life can only be forged through her reconciliation with the past. Set against the real far-right violence of the 2000s, Aber makes clear how social inequalities and racial prejudices effect artistic access and creativity. She also acutely captures the tensions between freedom and tradition as experienced by bicultural Muslim women grappling with the expectation to be 'good girls'. All Fours by Miranda July 'Everyone thinks doggy style is so vulnerable,' remarks one of the characters in Miranda July's latest work of fiction. This story takes sexuality as its subject along with its relationship with creativity and ageing – or more specifically, the midlife plunge from a cliff that is female menopause. Like the author, July's nameless protagonist is 45, a successful artist, and married with a non-binary child. This auto-fiction puts the author's erotic nonconformity at the centre of the frame. Our heroine embarks on a road-trip to New York, but only 20 minutes from her home she falls in love with a young man. The pair spend two weeks together in a motel pursuing a mutual obsession, which ultimately remains unconsummated. This experience upends her life and she rebounds into turbulent adventures in sex, discovering a new sense of self. Perhaps it could have been a little tighter than its 322 pages – but then again, it's a work that explores a capacious road to excess. All Fours is a funny, honest, rambunctious tale Elizabeth Kuti, Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies The Persians by Sanam Mahloudji 'Do they think we were just some refugees?' Shirin, one of the characters in The Persians, asks her niece Bita. 'Weren't we?' Bita replies. The question of what a refugee looks like and what kind of stories they are expected to tell is a central theme in Mahloudji's raucous, poignant novel. The story shifts back and forward in time, from Tehran in the 1940s to Los Angeles in the Reagan years, and to both America and Iran in the 2000s, interweaving the voices of five women from the wealthy and powerful Valiat family. Mahloudji explores love, miscommunication, loyalties and betrayal across generations as well as between those who left and those who stayed behind. Jewellery is a central theme in the novel: glistening in shops, hidden in suitcases or flung away in protest. It represents both the adornment of female identity and the weight of the history that the migrants carry with them. Alexandra Peat, Lecturer in English and Director of the MA in Literature and Publishing Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout Tell Me Everything is the tenth novel in Elizabeth Strout's well-known series that sketches the lives of ordinary, yet complex characters, who enter and exit each other's lives in the nowhere town of Crosby, Maine. The three main figures in this latest instalment are 90-year-old retired schoolteacher Olive Kitteridge (recognisable from Frances McDormand's realisation in the award-winning TV series by the same name), middle age fiction writer Lucy Barton, and 65-year-old lawyer Bob Burgess. Loosely, this novel can be described as a murder mystery, though the plot twist of an alleged matricide, and Burgess's decision to defend the case, are secondary to the three main characters' process of sharing previously untold accounts of forbidden, traumatic, guilty and unrequited love. It is this telling and memorialising that produces the emotional core of the novel. If sharing their past gives the ageing storytellers some respite from the burden of their hidden lives, it is not in the kind that comforts with meaning and purpose. In Strout's novel, this relief is unavailable and is replaced with the more ephemeral solace of simply being heard. Fundamentally by Nussaibah Younis At the heart of Fundamentally is the affinity that forms between narrator Nadia, appointed by the United Nations to rehabilitate 'Isis brides' in Iraq, and one of her subjects, Sara, an east Londoner on the cusp of adulthood. They connect through a shared love of rollerblading, Dairy Milk and X-Men, as well as their caustic sense of humour. But the two British Muslim women have followed vastly different routes – Nadia to academia and the UN and Sara to a detention camp in Ninewah. Nadia's story of her journey through the vagaries of the humanitarian sector, punctuated by flashbacks to her failed relationship with first love Rosy and fraught relationship with her mother, is told with a compelling mix of verve and vulnerability. It raises hard ethical and political questions along the way. But it is Nadia's mission to help Sara that gives the novel its emotional complexity and depth, drawing the reader in while denying us any easy answers. Rehana Ahmed, Reader in Postcolonial and Contemporary Literature. DM This story first appeared in The Conversation. Manjeet Ridon is a Associate Dean International, Arts, Design and Humanities. Éadaoin Agnew is a Senior lecturer in English literature. Elizabeth Kuti is a Professor in the Department of Literature Film and Theatre Studies. Alexandra Peat is a Lecturer in English and Director of the MA in Literature and Publishing. Yianna Liatsos is a Associate Professor in the School of English Irish and Communication. Rehana Ahmed is a Reader in Postcolonial and Contemporary Literature.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store