يحاول ذهب - حر
Only connect - The NigerianAmerican author returns with an ambitious, astute and moving exploration of female experience
March 07, 2025
|The Guardian Weekly
Novels had always felt to me truer than what was real," declares a character in Dream Count, the highly anticipated new novel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
It is a statement echoed in the accompanying author's note, which contends that the "point of art is to look at our world and be moved by it, and then to engage in a series of attempts at clearly seeing that world, interpreting it, questioning it". Since the publication of her extraordinarily assured debut novel, Purple Hibiscus, in 2003, Adichie's fiction has performed this task of seeing, interpreting and questioning to huge acclaim, garnering her major awards as well as a public profile far beyond most writers.
Dream Count is perhaps the surest bet so far for this year's Women's prize. However, its publication is accompanied by difficult personal circumstances: Adichie's father died in June 2020, followed in March 2021 by the death of her mother, after which, as she writes in the author's note, her "life's cover was ripped off". Having written about her father's death in her essay Notes on Grief, Dream Count, Adichie asserts, is "really about my mother". Composed of the interlocking stories of four women, Chiamaka ("Chia"), Zikora, Omelogor and Kadiatou, it is quintessential Adichie: ambitious, astute and powered by an accumulation of feather-light sentences that build to devastating weight.
هذه القصة من طبعة March 07, 2025 من The Guardian Weekly.
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