
Nigerian author Chimamanda
Ngozi Adichie has received a special Mary McCarthy award for her thought
evoking novels and charismatic public awareness.
Nigerian author Chimamanda
Ngozi Adichie keeps breaking boundaries, winning a special Mary McCarthy award
for her thought evoking novels and charismatic public awareness. Adichie was
last month conferred with an honorary degree from Haverford College, an
institution in Pennsylvania, United States.
Chimamanda who is a
recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship attended the Mary McCarthy
Prize, Bard College as a special guest.
Her work has appeared in
various publications and has been translated into over thirty languages with
her first novel Purple Hibiscus (2003) won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and
her second novel Half of a Yellow Sun (2006) won the Orange Prize (now the
Baileys Women’s Prize). Her most recent book Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist
Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions was published in March 2017.
The writer, feminist and
Patriot wore a super chic Zohi Taglit leather stripped jumpsuit with wide
legged bottoms and exaggerated sleeves as a way to promote the project ‘wear
Nigerian’. By patronising Nigerian brands, she is doing her part to help
improve the country’s economy.
The Mary McCarthy Prize in
short fiction includes a cash award, publication of a collection of short
stories, novella or short novel and standard royalty contract.
In a relatively short
career, Adichie has quickly grown to become one of the continent’s foremost
writers. A fervent feminist and critic, the Nigerian author has received around
21 nominations for her work and has won numerous awards.
Adichie was recently
conferred with an honorary degree by Haverford College, an institution in
Pennsylvania, United States. Haverford College stated in their press release:
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is
one of the most prominent African writers of her generation. Her Purple
Hibiscus (2003) won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for first work. Half of a
Yellow Sun (2006) won the Orange Prize, the world’s top prize for female
writers. Americanah (2013) received numerous accolades, including the National
Book Critics Circle Award, and was named one of The New York Times Top Ten Best
Books of the Year.



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