40 pages • 1 hour read
Bernardine EvaristoA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
Bernardine Evaristo’s polyphonic novel of modern Britain and womanhood, Girl, Woman, Other, won the 2019 Booker Prize. Evaristo was the first Black woman to receive this literary prize for books written in the English language. Employing an experimental, poetic form, the novel follows several generations of mainly Black, British women who interrogate the intersections of identity, Human Connectivity and Interdependence, Diaspora in Great Britain, and The Impact of Family Legacy. Girl, Woman, Other is Evaristo’s eighth book. The novel’s title likely references writer and filmmaker Trinh T. Minh-Ha’s book on feminism and postcoloniality called Woman, Native, Other.
Content Warning: The source material and guide contain references to racism, anti-LGBTQ+ bias, domestic abuse, rape, addiction, and the history of slavery in the United States.
Plot Summary
In Chapter 1 of Girl, Woman, Other, queer theater director Amma Bonsu prepares for the opening of her acclaimed new play, The Last Amazon of Dahomey. As she walks to the National Theatre in London, she reflects on the years of struggle she endured as a young Black actress, the challenges of starting her own theater company, and the surprising joys of motherhood. Her confident and opinionated daughter, Yazz, begins college and meets a group of friends who defy her expectations of the way the world works. Amma’s best friend, Dominique, begins a relationship with an African American woman called Nzinga, whom she follows to the United States. Once in America, Dominique becomes increasingly aware of Nzinga’s controlling behavior. When Dominique finally musters the courage to leave Nzinga, she moves to Los Angeles and establishes a successful women’s arts festival.
Chapter 2 profiles former school friends Carole and LaTisha and Carole’s Nigerian-born mother, Bummi. With the help of her schoolteacher, Shirley King, Carole excels in school and becomes a successful banker. She marries a wealthy, charismatic white British man. LaTisha, whose childhood happiness is overshadowed by the unexpected departure of her father, begins working at a grocery store upon her graduation and gives birth to three children with different fathers. While Carole enters early adulthood, Bummi opens her own cleaning business. She begins a relationship with her employee, Omofe, but ends it when she can no longer face the shame of a lesbian romance.
Chapter 3 details the lives of Shirley King, a schoolteacher, her colleague Penelope, and Shirley’s mother, Winsome. While Shirley begins her career bright-eyed and hopeful, she later becomes disillusioned. Shirley begins to mentor one student per year, beginning with Carole. Throughout her life, Shirley remains grateful for her marriage to handsome, loyal Lennox. However, as Winsome’s section reveals, Shirley’s mother and Lennox had a secret affair. Penelope and Shirley begin as enemies, as they butt heads over Shirley’s more modern, racially sensitive approach to education. Penelope has two marriages. In the first, her desire for a career drives a wedge between her and her husband. In her second, Penelope’s psychotherapist husband analyzes her every move until he eventually leaves her for a young patient.
Chapter 4 unfolds the life stories of Megan/Morgan, Morgan’s great-grandmother, Hattie, and Hattie’s mother, Grace. Lacking support for her queer identity from her liberal parents, Megan turns to drugs and then to the internet for answers. Online, Megan meets a trans woman named Bibi, who introduces her to the possibilities of gender nonbinary life. With Bibi’s help, Megan changes their pronouns from “she/her” to “they/them” and their name from Megan to Morgan. Bibi and Morgan form a long-lasting romantic relationship. They regularly visit Hattie on her family farm, Greenfields. Hattie grew up on Greenfields, which belonged to the European side of her family for over 200 years. After her father died, Hattie’s African American husband found documentation confirming that Hattie’s paternal relatives built their fortune as enslavers and purchased Greenfields with the spoils.
Chapter 5 details the afterparty of Amma’s play, The Last Amazon of Dahomey, bringing many characters together. The Epilogue focuses on Penelope’s reunion with her birth mother, Hattie. After the women find each other through a DNA test on Ancestry.com, Hattie confesses to Morgan that she had a child at the age of 14 that her father forced her to give up. After Penelope’s initial shock at discovering she is only 17% British and 13% African, she travels to Greenfields to meet her mother. Upon sight, the two women have an instinctual connection. Penelope renounces her lifetime of prejudice and rushes to embrace her newfound mother.
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By Bernardine Evaristo
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