• en
ON NOW

Chimamanda Talks Career, Feminism and Grief on ARISE Interview

[bc_video video_id=”6266263205001″ account_id=”6116119081001″ player_id=”default” embed=”in-page” padding_top=”56%” autoplay=”” min_width=”0px” playsinline=”” picture_in_picture=”” max_width=”640px” mute=”” width=”100%” height=”100%” ] Her books have been read by millions across the world, brilliantly articulate, universal stories that

[bc_video video_id=”6266263205001″ account_id=”6116119081001″ player_id=”default” embed=”in-page” padding_top=”56%” autoplay=”” min_width=”0px” playsinline=”” picture_in_picture=”” max_width=”640px” mute=”” width=”100%” height=”100%” ]

Her books have been read by millions across the world, brilliantly articulate, universal stories that everyone can easily understand, tales to get lost in, full of endless possibilities and impossible complexities, dripping with the contradictions and juxtapositions of life – so much suffering and smiling, so much energy and inspiration.

It is this rousing talent that’s turned Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie into a best-selling author, placing her in the top tier of not just African, but global writers, in the elite company of Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, J.K Rowling, Ken Follett, Dan Brown and Alicia Walker, to mention a few.

To read her fiction is to experience an awakening…But the best part of it is she’s Nigerian…The world burns bright as we tell the story of our special guest today, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

Follow us on:

ON NOW