First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"I believed that the woman in front of me, frail and sitting, had eaten life, swallowed it completely whole. I imagine she danced, fell in love, made love, made children, made lives, and set people straight with her arrow-words. And you know, danger, in the way it manifests in these women, has never been more allowing or more generous"
"My motherâs cousins. Dangerous in the sense that they take up magnificent space, they know what it is to laugh even though they have cried too"
"My grandmother was one such woman. For very long she convinced me only of her sweetness until one day when I commented on how lovely she was she, holding a pot of boiling water, said Muh dear there was time when I throw this water on you soon as look as yuh. It would appear, I learnt, that my sweet grandmother once had a temper. Most dangerous women do, an important ability to access their rage whose existence alone runs counter to nursery rhymes we were fed about sugar and nice"
"Many of the women on the island of my birth are like this. Their bow tongues launch arrows into the world and never miss their mark"
"Dangerous women show up sometimes, they disturb something"
"When I think of dangerous women I donât think of women in whose presence I am in danger. When I think of dangerous women I think of women in whose presence the dangers of life finally meet their match. The kind of dangers Iâm talking about are the hypocrisies, the patriarchy, the rules that are no rules at all but simply ways to cheat freedom and oppress those who dare sing out"
"Identity is complex. I love being a Nigerian, I love belonging to that identity even if my belonging is complex, due to my multiple identities and migratory life experience"
"Regardless of how many years IââŹâ˘ve lived in South Africa I think of myself as a product of three nations: Barbados, Nigeria and South Africa. Nigeria forms a very strong part of my sense of myself, my identity"
"My mother died when I was 23, and apart from the recent birth of my children, that is the most profound experience of my life. The grief that followed is a sharp memory of mine and Iâve often joked that the experience irrevocably marked my writing."
"Coming from across cultures, I believe I mostly value difference as opposed to being threatened by it... Over time as I gain in knowledge and become braver I hope to set more stories solidly in Nigeria or Barbados but you cannot, as a writer, fake familiarity with a place â I donât think so anyway."
"She understood what perhaps they are only just learning. That if you attempt to clean the messiness of life you end up scrubbing the life away from living. We can't excise joy from pain."
"The pieces of life, even when put together, assembled, never amount to the life itself."
"Hating, after all, was a drier form of drowning."
"I wonder if I should explain that itâs not that I donât want to make love, only that after a long day of attending to others Iâm craving space."
"Henry Louis Gates Jrâs op-ed piece in the New York times, Whoâs Afraid of Black History? didnât change my mind on the topic but it brought much needed perspective and insight to the current curriculum debates in the US."
"As a child, I was a voracious reader, of books and of people, and still am an inveterate eavesdropper and people-watcher. Snippets of overheard conversations and the faces of people not usually noticed often inspire the stories I write. Wondering about other peopleâs life stories is what I do."
"In these tumultuous times, I keep returning to James Baldwinâs essays and in particular to his Notes of a Native Son. He reminds me of the importance of holding on to two seemingly contradictory ideas at the same time: staying committed to the struggles against injustices while keeping oneâs heart free of hatred and despair."
"My father describes Okigbo as a fast-speaking, fast-driving, fun-loving, and extremely intelligent young man. He apparently had a flair for languages, routinely reciting passages of Ovid in Latin, and tutoring one student in Greek who subsequently got an A in the Greek exam. My dad also describes how Okigbo, along with the school headmaster, Alex Ajayi, would have various âbashesâ over the weekend. They were, as my father later reflected, a high-powered Bloomsbury Group of young intellectuals and scholars. These are stories I wish we had more of, and theyâre part of the impetus behind Between Starshine and Clay: Conversations from the African Diaspora."
"The warmth that I feel toward Okigbo actually comes from hearing my father speak about him. In the late 1950s, my father was one of his students at Fiditi Grammar School, Ibadan, where Okigbo taught Latin and English literature and was also the sports coach. I suspect that my dad, the football teamâs goalkeeper, might have been one of Okigboâs favorite students. He recounts the story of how Okigbo came to him one afternoon and asked if heâd ever traveled in a car that went as fast as one hundred miles an hour. âHop in,â said Okigbo to my father, and then proceeded to dazzle him with a speedy drive to the University of Ibadan in his red sports car."
"Thatâs a really interesting observation. Youâre right that there are similarities between the two protagonists. Tayo and Obi are roughly of the same generation, they both win scholarships to study abroad, and they return to Nigeria full of idealism before finding themselves buffeted by some of the same issues and challenges of the day. Whatâs also interesting is that itâs Vanessa who urges Tayo to read Achebeâs novels. When Tayo does read No Longer at Ease, heâs struck by how tragic the story is but doesnât, at least not in his letter to Vanessa, go as far as reflecting on how Obiâs story might be relevant to his own life."
"Iâm so grateful to Adichie for having written Half of a Yellow Sun with its focus on the Nigerian civil war. Her novel, alongside other books with the war at its core, including Soyinkaâs memoir The Man Died, Chris Abaniâs novella-in-verse Daphneâs Lot, and Chinelo Okparantaâs novel Under the Udala Trees, all give us a greater sense of the events and conditions of that horrific war. While the civil war is not the central focus of In Dependence, it forms part of the tragic backdrop to the story. In Dependence is deeply personal for me in that I am writing about my parentsâ generation. This is not my parentsâ story, but it could have been their story."
"I think that every relationship has its complications, and in the case of Tayo and Vanessa, they had to contend with the added family and societal pressures of being an interracial couple at a time of pervasive colonial attitudes. In the 1960s, there was a great deal of societal resistance to interracial relationships, attitudes that arguably still persist to this day whether in the UK, America, or elsewhere. If Iâd written a novel without complications, I also suspect that your neighborâs daughter would have exercised her spirit of independence and found a different book to immerse herself in."
"Thank you, Darlington, and what a touching story! Iâd love to meet your neighborâs daughter. In terms of what inspired the novel, it was simply as Morrison once put it: If thereâs a story youâre dying to read and you canât find it, then write it. I was looking for a great interracial love story set in geographical locations and historical periods that I was particularly interested inânamely West Africa from the 1960s to present dayâand because I couldnât find that story, I attempted to write it."
"You mention Abubakarâs wonderful novel, Season of Crimson Blossoms, and I can tell you that when it came out I joked with him that his fifty-five-year-old Bintu could hardly be considered an old woman, at least not in comparison to my Morayo, two decades older. However, I hadnât yet met Willard Harris, a real-life character and now a dear friend whom I write about in my new book. Mrs. Harris was ninety-seven years old when I first met her, and at that time she had a âgentleman friendâ who was at least a decade younger than her. You know what they say about life being stranger or more interesting than fiction."
"Iâd met many older women who had lived colorful lives, and yet when it came to fiction I couldnât find many stories that mirrored this, especially so when it came to the lives of Black women. Similarly, I couldnât find many books that explored an older womanâs sexuality. I had many literary examples of older menâs desire, but far less when it came to older women, and so I decided to go there, albeit in a small way."
"In many ways, the story I chose to write is not what readers might associate with the archetypal immigrant or exile story. Itâs not a story of someone who has arrived in a country without all the necessary documentation, or of someone living on the edges of society, just barely scraping by. I chose to write about a character who lives a life of the mind and is materially well off. Yet, as you highlight, she too faces hardships and loneliness in her old age."
"My first thought is that there are, of course, harsher forms of exile. Morayo does at least have a comfortable place to live, food to eat, and access to health care. I also suspect that Morayo, with thoughts of the ethnic and religious strife that had taken place in her home city of Jos, might be quick to say that the internally displaced face the cruelest form of exile."
"But in brief, as a child of a multiracial marriage who has lived in various countries with different histories of race and racism, and as a scholar and novelist for whom race and identity feature fairly prominently in my work, itâs safe to say that these issues are weighty, albeit not to the point of holding me back. Here again is where I take my cue from Baldwin, who advocates remaining committed to the struggle against injustices while keeping oneâs heart free of hatred and despair."
"Humans are fond of putting people into categories for all sorts of reasons, but oftentimes, especially when it comes to skin color and nationality, for creating hierarchies or pecking orders. As for my experiences of race and identity, thatâs a very big question deserving of an essay-length response, hence my introductory chapter."
"I have written about Baldwin in Between Starshine and Clay and elsewhere. Baldwin means a lot to me for the following reasons: he inspires me as a writer; he inspires me for his wisdomâhis insights and clarity around many issues; and I identify with the various places and peoples of the African diaspora that he writes about from France to America. My introductory essay is a reverent nod to Baldwinâs Notes of a Native Son with its personal exploration of race, histories, and countries lived in."
"How I wish that Baldwin was still with usâhe was so wise, and his work feels just as relevant today as it was during his lifetime. Baldwinâs presence is felt throughout this book in part because he meant so much to many of those featured, including Morrison. In Morrisonâs eulogy for Baldwin, she refers to three gifts that he gave to her: tenderness, courage, and language. These are gifts that I feel heâs given to all of us, and of course Morrison has left us with similar gifts, too. A copy of Baldwinâs Collected Essays has sat close to my writing desk for more than two decades. It sits alongside Margaret Busbyâs groundbreaking anthologies, Daughters of Africa and New Daughters of Africaâmy literary taliswomen."
"Oh, so many things, especially the joyful moments that we shared. I remember, for example, the laughter between old friends Wole Soyinka and Henry Louis Gates Jr. as Soyinka reminisced about Morrison teaching him the phrase âknock your socks offâ but then failing to deliver on the promise of knocking his socks off with the choice of a restaurant that Soyinka found lackingânot enough pepper! Or the moment when I asked Morrison if we could talk about sex, to which she responded with a wry smile, âYeah! Iâm in a good position to talk about it, since itâs been like a thousand years. What do you want to know?â Or the day, when walking with 102-year-old Willard Harris, that she insisted I seize the opportunity to travel to the South Pole, repeatedly saying, âYou go, girl!â And so it was that the stories and the laughter flowed. I also love the adage that several of them cite, from Michelle Obama to Lord Michael Hastings, Margaret Busby, and Senator Cory Bookerâplant trees under whose shade other generations will sit. Each of those featured embodies this evocation."
"There are some in this book, like Michelle Obama, for example, who used the platforms they were given to effect change while others, such as Evan Mawarire, created a movement from the bottom up to speak truth to power. The twelve featured are a tiny subset of many others doing extraordinary things. My hope is that Between Starshine and Clay will inspire more writers to capture such stories and histories."
"Thank you, Darlington. My hope is that this book will lead, in some small way, to a deeper and richer understanding of Africa and the African diasporaâof the many things we hold in common as well as our differences. Similarities range from experiences of racism and discrimination to police brutality, and to the fragility of democracies whether weâre talking about Nigeria, Zimbabwe, or America. Differences include personal histories, identities, backgrounds, and geographies."
"I never thought about the confluence of the two books in the way youâve described it. I love it! This is part of the beauty of writing, being surprised by what others see. Yes, Tayo and Morayo would certainly have a lot to talk aboutâtheir relationship might even go further than a platonic one. Who knows! There are certainly thematic similarities between the books, especially around the notion of independence and interdependence. I also see a chronological continuation between both novels. I left Tayo and Vanessa at the end of In Dependence in their sixties and with Like a Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun I moved to a character in her seventies. It would follow, therefore that my next book might feature a character in her eighties and perhaps some younger characters too. Which, coincidentally, at least thus farâŚis the way book three is looking."
"Going to Hedgebrook was a transformative experience for me. I was already a published author before I went, but the experience of going to Hedgebrook and meeting other writers made me believe in myself as a writer and trust in my own voice more than Iâd ever dared to before. Iâve always tried to support fellow writers and Hedgebrook has given me an even wider platform from which to do so."
"In the early stages of any project I need longer periods of unstructured time to delve deeply into the writing and to stick to the project. Itâs easier for me to balance several things at once if Iâm in the editing and polishing phases of writing. Iâm almost always craving more time and solitude to write, but at the same time I know that being engaged in the world is what fuels my writing."
"I donât find juggling easy. However, for the past few years, Iâve been lucky enough to attend a few writing retreats (such as Hedgebrook) and that always gives my writing a boost. Currently, Iâm not teaching, which makes it easier to prioritize my writing. The way that youâve described your struggle to maintain balance certainly resonates for me."
"Had I known that my first novel would become required reading for all students applying to university in Nigeria, I probably wouldnât have had the courage to write it. It has been an incredible honor for me to have a book read by so many people and especially exciting to know that the novel is, in some small way, inspiring a new generation of writers."
"At the time that I began to write the novel I was simply looking for a really good love story set in my parentâs generation with at least one character from West Africa, and because I couldnât find such a story, I tried writing it myself. As Toni Morrison says, if thereâs a book you want to read but canât find, then try writing it."
"And recently, because London has been on my mind, Iâve found myself placing Zadie Smithâs NW next to Brian Chikwavaâs Harare North, Muriel Sparkâs The Ballad of Peckham Rye and Ben Judahâs This is London. I, like Morayo, am interested in books expanding and enriching the literary landscape. As for my two novels, they currently still sit alphabetically on my shelves, happily wedged in between Jhumpa Lahiri, Amara Lakhous, Javier Marias, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez."
"Thanks to my character, I too have begun to group my books in non-traditional ways. Thus far, my groupings, unlike Morayoâs, have been less about characters talking to each other and more about pairing authors. For example, I have Marilynne Robinson and Toni Morrisonâs Homeâs next to each other as well as God Help the Child next to Lila as there are thematic similarities in both pairings."
"The name, Morayo, means âI see joyâ in Yoruba, so this already signals to some readers that joy has encircled her from birth. At the same time, Morayo works hard to stay optimistic through the challenges that life brings. She is someone who is interested in narrative and in the same way that she enjoys changing the endings of some of her favorite books, she also tries to embrace narratives that help move her forward rather than getting her stuck or depressed. I suppose Iâve written a character to inspire me."
"Itâs still rare to see eroticism explored in elderly female characters, but not so rare for male characters. Thanks to such authors as J.M. Coetzee, Ian McEwan and Philip Roth, I have many literary examples of older menâs desire, but far less when it comes to older women. Yet, when I speak to older women I hear from them many stories about desireâ sexual and otherwise. So yes, desire was always going to be an important part of the book."
"I also never write about characters whose lives I donât have at least some sense of or a genuine interest in. Having a deep interest in my characters gives me both the confidence and passion to stick with them and write them as best I can."
"I usually begin with the idea of a character and then work on getting to know the character better. Iâve learned from actors that if I try to embody my characters physically, by walking, talking, and even dressing like them, then my characters become more real to me and therefore more believable on the page."
"Toni Morrisonâs novel Home for the immense power of her story and the exquisite beauty of her language. Iâve read, re-read and listened to the book being read by the author."
"Iâm thinking a lot about the fraught state of our world including the wars in Ukraine and in Gaza. Iâve just started reading The Ukraine by writer Artem Chapeye, who is currently fighting for his country, as well as The Hundred Yearsâ War on Palestine by Rashid Khalidi. Iâm also re-reading David Grossmanâs To the End of the Land."
"When was the last time you failed or faced rejection as a writer and how did you cope with it and what did you learn from the experience?"
"I have a number of books in other languagesâaspirational books for when my language skills improve enough to be able to read them. Iâm particularly keen to read more books by African authors that are not yet translated into English. The two that currently sit on my desk are translations from other European languages: La sombra de la MulembaâCuentos Africanos LusĂłfonos and MatemĂĄticas Congolesas by Koli Jean Bofane. I would love to add to my bookshelves, many more books published in African languages."