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Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2014

Americanah wins Best Fiction at National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) Award

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and her editor Robin Desser at the NBCC Awards after AMERICANAH won best Fiction.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's first novel was longlisted for the Man Booker prize; her second, Half of a Yellow Sun, won the Orange prize. Now her third, the acclaimed Americanah, has beaten Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch to win the Nigerian author one of most prestigious literary prizes in the US, the National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) award.


Americanah, which has also just been longlisted for the Baileys women's fiction prize, alongside titles by Evie Wyld, Elizabeth Gilbert and Booker-winner Eleanor Catton, had previously found favour among US book reviewers. The New York Times called it "witheringly trenchant and hugely empathetic, both worldly and geographically precise, a novel that holds the discomfiting realities of our times fearlessly before us", and the Washington Post said it contained "a ruthless honesty about the ugly and beautiful sides" of the United States and Nigeria.

www.theguardian.com

Thursday, December 5, 2013

#AMERICANAH by Chimamanda Ngozi-Adichie Tops NYTimes List of 'The 10 Best Books of 2013



The year’s best books, selected by the editors of The New York Times 

Book Review.


FICTION
By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
By turns tender and trenchant, Adichie’s third novel takes on the comedy and tragedy of American race relations from the perspective of a young Nigerian immigrant. From the office politics of a hair-braiding salon to the burden of memory, there’s nothing too humble or daunting for this fearless writer, who is so attuned to the various worlds and shifting selves we inhabit — in life and online, in love, as agents and victims of history and the heroes of our own stories.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Chika Unigwe, Author of On Black Sisters' Street Wins Nigeria Prize for Literature, Gets $100, 000


Afro Belgian-Nigerian-born author Chika Unigwe has recently been announced winner of the Nigeria Prize for Literature for her novel On Black Sisters’ Street. The fictional novel about prostitutes and their way of life has since published received impressive reviews and comments. The announcement was made today, with NLNG, the sponsors of the prize saying that Unigwe “displayed a very sophisticated narrative technique”.


Unigwe who was raised in Nigeria has spent the last decade in Belgium, and it was a culture shock which led her to write about four Nigerian girls working Antwerp’s red light district. ‘When I moved to Belgium one of the biggest shocks was seeing black women in display cases in their knickers and bustiers,’ says Unigwe. ‘I was intrigued, and I wrote short stories about them based on imagination. But I didn’t really know about their lives, so when I decided to write the novel, I went and talked to the girls.'

Excerpt:  On Black Sisters’ Street
The person who has brought these women together, it turns out, is Dele, a “big man” back in Lagos whose wealth comes from selling African women to Western European brothels. “Every month I send gals to Europe. Antwerp. Milan. Madrid. My gals dey there. Every month, four gals. Sometimes five or more,” he boasts to Sisi when she first visits his office. “You be fine gal now. Abi, see your backside, kai! Who talk say na dat Jennifer Lopez get the finest nyansh? . . . As for those melons wey you carry for chest, omo, how you no go fin’ work?”.



Chika Unigwe was announced winner of the NLNG sponsored Nigerian prize for Literature on Thursday 1 November at a world press conference held at the Ocean View Restaurant in Victora Island, Lagos.

Read reviews on the novel by clicking the links below…




More news on her prize: 



Thursday, October 11, 2012

Review: Fifty Shades of Grey

First I should say, Fifty shades of grey is a lovely book- it's reach, fun to read such that you'll actually want to finish reading at one go except you are me that has tons of other things that are on close deadlines- then you can get back after the to-do list is cleared.


I'm not quite the type that picks up just any book to read except my favourite fashion magazines ofcourse- Vogue, Tatler, Elle. So basically when I heard about the novel, 50 Fifty Shaded of Grey I didn't see any reason to getting a copy not until the reviews started.  From bloggers, book critics, newspapers, imdb and numerous other nay Sayers shared their own view- pointless ridiculous and surprisingly thrilling ones I though it'd not be a bad idea to give it a try.

So I did, I got myself a copy and like my usual style I flipped through the first pages then skipped to read a page in the middle (where i spent more time than i expected), finally few pages to the end where I felt I already started and finished the book already.

Splendid! I said to myself. I got a soft copy to make it easier to read considering I love reading in transit especially on my phone.

The beauty of the writing is mature not in an awkward way but in a silly sweet and exciting way. I especially liked the way each scene was carefully narrated but definitely not in a boring way; I also loved how each character was portrayed distinctively - no over the top characterization as often done. Such a beautiful read that keeps the reader all the way through.

Though in few pages - 356, it somehow felt like a thousand pages because it felt like a long interesting story that though read quickly but in the most engaging manner- that I love!

I have the other copies - Fifty Shades Darker & Fifty Shades Freed by the same author, EL James and  I'm hoping to be free anytime soon to read them too.