Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
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Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (born September 15, 1977, Enugu, Nigeria) is a Nigerian writer whose novels, short stories, and nonfiction explore feminism, postcolonialism, and the intersections of identity. Her second novel, Half of a Yellow Sun (2006), gained international acclaim for its depiction of the devastation caused by the Nigerian Civil War. She is considered to be one of the most influential voices in contemporary African literature, and her works have made her, in the words of several critics, a “global feminist icon.”
Early life and education
Early in life Adichie, the fifth of six children, moved with her Igbo parents to Nsukka, Nigeria. A voracious reader from a young age, she found Chinua Achebe’s 1958 novel Things Fall Apart transformative. After studying medicine for a time in Nsukka, in 1997 she left for the United States, where she studied communication and political science at Eastern Connecticut State University (B.A., 2001). Splitting her time between Nigeria and the United States, she received a master’s degree in creative writing from Johns Hopkins University and studied African history at Yale University.
For Love of Biafra and Purple Hibiscus
In 1998 Adichie’s play For Love of Biafra was published in Nigeria. She later dismissed it as “an awfully melodramatic play,” but it was among the earliest works in which she explored the war in the late 1960s between Nigeria and its secessionist Biafra republic. She later wrote several short stories about that conflict. As a student at Eastern Connecticut State University, Adichie began writing her first novel, Purple Hibiscus (2003). Set in Nigeria, it is the coming-of-age story of Kambili, a 15-year-old whose family is wealthy and well respected but who is terrorized by her fanatically religious father. Purple Hibiscus garnered the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize in 2005 for Best First Book (Africa) and that year’s Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best First Book (overall). It was also short-listed for the 2004 Orange Prize for Fiction.

Half of a Yellow Sun
“I write from real life. I am an unrepentant eavesdropper and a collector of stories. I record bits of overheard dialogue. I ask questions. I watch the world.”—Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, 2013
Half of a Yellow Sun (2006; film 2013), Adichie’s second novel, was the result of four years of research and writing. It was built primarily on the experiences of her parents during the Nigeria-Biafra war. The result was an epic novel that vividly depicts the savagery of the war (which resulted in the displacement and deaths of perhaps a million people) but does so by focusing on a small group of characters, mostly middle-class Africans. Half of a Yellow Sun became an international best seller and was awarded the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction in 2007. Eight years later it won the “Best of the Best” Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction, a special award for the “best” prizewinner from the previous decade.
The Thing Around Your Neck and Americanah
In 2008 Adichie received a MacArthur Foundation fellowship. The following year she released The Thing Around Your Neck, a critically acclaimed collection of short stories. Americanah (2013) centers on the romantic and existential struggles of a young Nigerian woman studying (and blogging about race) in the United States.
With the release of Americanah, Adichie achieved a global celebrity status unusual among contemporary authors. Scholars and critics have credited her with changing how African novels are received in Europe and the United States. In 2025 Ainehi Edoro, founder of Brittle Paper, a blog about African literature, told The Guardian,
Before [Adichie], African fiction often came packaged with a kind of ethnographic weight—expected to “explain” Africa to a Western audience. But Adichie’s work wasn’t performing “Africanness” for an outsider’s gaze; it was literary, intimate, contemporary. She helped shift expectations—both in publishing and among readers—so that the next wave of African writers didn’t have to over-explain, dilute or justify their stories.
We Should All Be Feminists, Dream Count, and other works
Adichie’s nonfiction includes We Should All Be Feminists (2014), an essay adapted from a talk she gave at a TEDx event in 2012; parts of her talk are also featured in Beyoncé’s song “Flawless” (2013). Dear Ijeawele, or A Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions was published in 2017. Following the death of her father, Adichie wrote Notes on Grief (2021), in which she mourned his passing and celebrated his life. In 2023 she penned her first book for children, Mama’s Sleeping Scarf, in which she described how an everyday object has the ability to connect with loved ones. The text was published under the pen name Nwa Grace-James, meaning “child of Grace and James,” in memory of both Adichie’s father and mother, the latter of whom died a few months after Adichie’s father.
In 2025 Adichie published Dream Count, her first novel in more than a decade. It centers on four women—three successful Nigerians and one Guinean widow who is sexually assaulted by a powerful guest in the hotel where she works as a maid. The novel’s plot draws upon an incident in 2011 in which French economist Dominique Strauss-Kahn, then director of the International Monetary Fund, was similarly accused by an African immigrant hotel worker. Strauss-Kahn was arrested, but the charges were eventually dropped. In the afterword of Dream Count, Adichie notes that the book is her attempt “to ‘write’ a wrong in the balance of stories.”