Bridging the Gap Between My Two Cultures with Fictional Foods
“They were all hungry at lunch-time. They went back up the cliff-path, hoping there would be lots to eat—and there was! Cold meat and salad, plum-pie and custard, and cheese afterwards. How the...
View ArticleRomeo Oriogun on Life as a Poet in Exile from Nigeria
Romeo Oriogun speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about his poem “The Sea Dreams of Us,” which appears in The Common’s fall issue. In this conversation, Romeo talks about his life as a poet in...
View ArticleHiding My Sexuality to Preserve My Life in the Nigerian Church
At eighteen, I was in college and I got ordained as a minister of the evangelical church, the Redeemed Christian Church of God student chapter in Enugu, Nigeria. Sunday mornings began with waking up as...
View ArticleBeyond the Colonial Gaze: Readings From Contemporary Nigeria
As an author I remain passionate about telling the stories of Black characters from an historical perspective. It’s my way of showing how Black people were so much more than popular slave narratives....
View ArticleHow Stories Create Individual and Collective Pasts, Presents, and Futures
My cousin Galaxy’s baby fell out of a two-story window and survived. They called the baby a miracle child like they called my brother a miracle child when he was thrown from a motorcycle only to live....
View ArticleAyọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀ on Capturing What it Means to Live in Contemporary Nigeria
This week on The Maris Review, Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀ joins Maris Kreizman to discuss her new novel, A Spell of Good Things, out now from Knopf. Subscribe and download the episode, wherever you get your...
View ArticleHow Nigeria’s Ideological and Ethnic Map Reflects Its Enduring Divides
A video, recorded on May 26, 1967, begins with a noiseless pan of faces: mostly men who are gathered, it seems, in front of the State House in Enugu, the capital of Nigeria’s Eastern Region. They’re...
View ArticleEmmanuel Iduma’s Reckoning with the Silence, Inheritance and History of the...
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right...
View ArticleWhen Writing a Novel Bridges a Gap Between Mother and Daughter
I was deep in the throes of a slow-moving depression, feeling frustrated with a job I had held for seven years, and reeling from the disappointment of a first novel that debuted without the critical...
View ArticleRape As a Weapon: A Tragedy Both Ancient and Modern
On a brilliant blue-skied July afternoon in Stratford-upon-Avon, swans were gliding serenely on the river, while I sat in the dim auditorium of the Royal Shakespeare Company and watched Titus...
View ArticleParadise Lost: How the Transatlantic Slave Trade Helped Fuel Violent Conflict...
The male and female warriors who stole the liberty and destroyed the town of those trafficked to the United States on the slave ship Clotilda launched their assault before dawn. The townsfolk were...
View ArticleHow Catalyst and Iskanchi Press Are Bringing African Writers’ Work to a Wider...
I met Kenechi Uzor a few years ago when he was new to publishing and launching his press, which focuses on publishing African writers. My own company, Catalyst Press, which also focuses on publishing...
View ArticleWriting Between Worlds: Navigating My African and American Identities on the...
If you had known me when I was much younger, and asked how I identified, I would have told you that I was Black. This would have been my way to acknowledge my Blackness in America, being that I was...
View ArticleHow a Novel by Mildred D. Taylor Helped Glory Edim Understand Being Black in...
When I glanced out a window and noticed that the sky was turning dark outside, I poked Maurice and told him to gather up his things. I carried the well-loved hardcover of Little Women to the library...
View Article