Nigerian international
writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie the author of “Half of a yellow moon”, Purple
Hibiscus, “The thing around your neck” has been chosen as one of TIME
magazine’s 2015 100 Most Influential People in the World. Congrats!
She is the first Nigerian
recipient of numerous prestigious literary awards including the Orange prize,
the National Book Critics Circle award, the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize and
the Nonino Prize for fiction. She has, most recently, been shortlisted for the
Dublin IMPAC prize, the most lucrative literary award in the world.
In addition, she was listed
as one of the top twenty fiction writers under the age of forty by The New
Yorker magazine.
She has been awarded a
Macarthur Fellowship, popularly known as the Macarthur ‘Genius’ Award.
Adichie has also been
honoured by the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs with the ‘Global
Ambassador’ award.
Her first TED talk, THE
DANGER OF A SINGLE STORY, is one of the most-watched TED talks and is a staple
of school courses all over the world. Her second TED talk, WE SHOULD ALL BE
FEMINISTS, has been a major influence in the ongoing worldwide resurgence of
feminism, and inspired Beyonce’s popular anthem FLAWLESS.
Her books have been
translated into more than thirty languages and have sold over a million copies
worldwide. The film adaptation of her most recent novel AMERICANAH will be
co-produced by Brad Pitt and Lupita Nyong’o.
She lives in Lagos, where
she organizes an annual creative writing workshop.
Other Nigerians on the TIME
100 list are activist Obiageli Ezekwesili, president-elect Muhammadu Buhari and
artist Chris Ofili.
Lakin
Ogunbanwo
New York magazine.
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