Ngozi achebe an image
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I don’t know how many Africans have been shortlisted in the past. I went through an Edith Wharton phase where I wanted to read everything she’d ever done, and then at some point I thought, if I read one more thing of hers, I will die.
I like Philip Roth quite a bit, much to the annoyance of my feminist friends.
I’m not sure. Your fiction vividly depicts the presence and weight of religion, with its accounts of traditional Catholicism, African Pentecostalism, Islam, a more liberal Catholicism, and indigenous beliefs. I became interested in traditional Igbo religion when we would go to our ancestral hometown, and I remain interested. What was it like to grow up as a Catholic in Nigeria in such a spiritually teeming world?
CNA: It was indeed spiritually teeming.
It was difficult technically, because I was turning research into fiction, which I had never done before, but also emotionally, because my grandfathers died in the war and I constantly thought about them as I was writing, particularly my paternal grandfather. The design. I am Nigerian.
He does what he believes in.
Born in Nigeria in 1977, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie grew up in the university town of Nsukka, living for a time in a house once occupied by Chinua Achebe. It was, “Shut up. Because of limited staff time, we’re not able to guarantee personalized feedback, but please know that we’re grateful to each writer who takes the risk of sharing work with us.
All the work we publish reflects what we see as a sustained engagement with Judaism, Christianity, or Islam.
I was drawn to religion, but I was the kid who just wouldn’t shut up. I am a very keen believer in the middle ground and the possibility of coexistence, and I am suspicious of extremes of either side. Upon publication, we pay $25 per published page for prose or $3 per line for poetry, with a minimum payment of $100 and maximum of $400, plus four copies.
I haven’t been back in that church since, and I don’t know that I ever will. I would cry at Paschal Mass when we raised the candles. I’m going to beat goodness into you.” And, of course, he had experienced that himself. In churches in Nigeria there’s a big fuss made about covering your hair.