Women’s Prize: A Win!

I don’t know about you, but all of us at The Friedrich Agency are so glad that this heat advisory has broken. And with the cooler, much longed for summer breeze comes news that’s equally longed for:   

Ruth Ozeki has WON this year’s Women’s Prize for Fiction for The Book of Form and Emptiness! There was not a single dry eye in our office that day as we crowded around Lucy’s laptop to listen to Ruth’s acceptance speech. A long-deserved triumph!

 
 

In addition to being the newly-minted winner of the Women’s Prize, The Book of Form and Emptiness is a New York Times’ Editors’ Choice, a Boston Globe bestseller, a Washington Post bestseller, a National Indie bestseller, among others! I wanted to highlight this rave from The Boston Globe, as well as this blurb from David Mitchell, as I think they capture the sentiment shared by many about this book:

“If you’ve lost your way with fiction over the last year or two, let The Book of Form and Emptiness light your way home.”

— David Mitchell, Booker Prize-finalist author of Cloud Atlas

US cover

“An ambitious and ingenious novel that presents a stinging exploration of grief [and] a reflection on our relationship to objects… combine[s] daunting intellectual complexity and accessible big-heartedness… The most endearing aspect of Ozeki’s novel is its unabashed celebration of words, writing, and reading… Ozeki’s playfulness and zaniness, her compassion and boundless curiosity, prevent the novel from ever feeling stiff or pretentious. Clever without being arch, metafictional without being arcane, dark without being nihilistic, The Book of Form and Emptiness is an exuberant delight.

— The Boston Globe

UK cover

At the award ceremony (video below! Recommend starting at 7:32), Mary Ann Sieghart, the 2022 chair of judges, noted that The Book of Form and Emptiness “ stood out for its sparkling writing, warmth, intelligence, humor and poignancy… and is a complete joy to read. Ruth Ozeki is a truly original and masterful storyteller.”

We couldn’t agree more—congratulations, Ruth!  

—Marin