Americanah
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
Fra den prisbelønnede forfatter til En halv gul sol kommer en besættende roman om kærlighed, race og identitet.
Ifemelu og Obinze forelsker sig i Lagos som teenagere. Nigeria styres af militæret, og folk flygter fra landet. Selvsikre
Ifemelu rejser til USA. Her oplever hun sejre og nederlag, finder og mister venner og konfronteres for første gang i sit liv med spørgsmål om race. Obinze har planer om at rejse efter Ifemelu, men efter terrorangrebet den 11. september nægtes han adgang til USA. I stedet kastes han ud i en farlig og illegal tilværelse i London.
Tretten år senere er Obinze en velstående mand i det nye demokratiske Nigeria, og Ifemelu har fået succes i USA som
forfatter til en anerkendt blog. Men har de efter så mange års adskillelse modet til at mødes igen?
Americanah udspiller sig på tre kontinenter og skildrer en række stærke menneskeskæbner. Den er en rig fortælling,
der foregår i nutidens globaliserede verden. Først og fremmest er den dog en roman om kærlighed.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Adichie burst onto the literary scene in 2006 with Half of a Yellow Sun, her searing depiction of the civil war in Nigeria. Her equally compelling and important new novel follows the lives of that country's postwar generation as they suffer endemic corruption and poverty under a military dictatorship. An unflinching but compassionate observer, Adichie writes a vibrant tale about love, betrayal, and destiny; about racism; and about a society in which honesty is extinct and cynicism is the national philosophy. She broadens her canvas to include both America and England, where she illuminates the precarious tightrope existence of culturally and racially displaced immigrants. The friendship of Ifemelu and Obinze begins in secondary school in Lagos and blossoms into love. When Ifemelu earns a scholarship to an American college, Obinze intends to join her after his university graduation, but he's denied a U.S. visa. He manages to get to London where his plight is typical of illegal immigrants there: he uses another man's ID so he can find menial, off-the-grid work, with the attendant loss of dignity and self-respect. The final blow comes when he's arrested and deported home. Ifemelu, meanwhile, faces the same humiliations, indignities, and privations first in New York, then in Philadelphia. There, attending college, she's unable to find a job and descends to a degrading sexual act in order to pay her rent. Later she becomes a babysitter for a wealthy white family and begins writing a provocative blog on being black in America that bristles with sharp, incisive observations about racism. Ifemelu writes that the painful, expensive process of "relaxing" kinky African hair to conform to cultural expectations brings black women dangerously close to self-hatred. In time the blog earns Ifemelu fame and a fellowship to Princeton, where she has love affairs with a wealthy white man and, later, an African-American Yale professor. Her decision to return home to Nigeria (where she risks being designated as an affected "Americanah") is the turning point of the novel's touching love story and an illuminating portrait of a country still in political turmoil. Announced first printing of 60,000.