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Buchi Emecheta
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Marieke
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Apr 24, 2015 07:00AM

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Thanks! i just requested them from the collections at work. :)

Part of the story involves a lot of men dying from "felenza," but it's not clear to me what felenza is. it seems to have something to do with the white people/colonists. i thought maybe it had something to do with guns, but then the little girl (who would become the slave girl) lost her mother to this felenza after losing her father to it...anyone know what felenza is?





(Florence Onye) Buchi Emecheta was born on 21 July 1944, in Lagos to Igbo parents, Alice (Okwuekwuhe) Emecheta and Jeremy Nwabudinke, both parents from Ibusa, Delta State, Nigeria. Her father was a railway worker in the 1940s. Due to the gender bias of the time, the young Buchi Emecheta was initially kept at home while her younger brother was sent to school; but after persuading her parents to consider the benefits of her education, she spent her early childhood at an all-girl's missionary school. Her father died when she was nine years old. A year later, Emecheta received a full scholarship to the Methodist Girls School, where she remained until the age of 16 when she married Sylvester Onwordi, a student to whom she had been engaged since she was 11 years old.
Onwordi immediately moved to London to attend university and Emecheta joined him in 1962. She gave birth to five children in six years. It was an unhappy and sometimes violent marriage (as chronicled in her autobiographical writings such as Second-Class Citizen).[1] To keep her sanity, Emecheta wrote in her spare time; however, her husband was deeply suspicious of her writing, and he ultimately burned her first manuscript.[2][3] At the age of 22, Emecheta left her husband. While working to support her five children alone, she earned a BSc degree in Sociology at the University of London.
She began writing about her experiences of Black British life in a regular column in the New Statesman, and a collection of these pieces became her first published book in 1972, In the Ditch. The semi-autobiographical book chronicled the struggles of a main character named Adah, who is forced to live in a housing estate while working as a librarian to support her five children. Her second novel published two years later, Second-Class Citizen (Allison and Busby, 1974), also drew on Emecheta's own experiences, and both books were eventually published in one volume as Adah's Story (1983).

Wow, she is an amazing woman. Thanks for posting that. I have been really remiss in setting up the introductory comment for this thread.

Is anyone reading anything of hers at the moment or planning to soon?

Just read Second Rate Citizen (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8...) (Sorry 'Add book' doesn't work?)
Great read!
My review here. Especially impressed with the elegance of telling the story loyally from her protagonists point of view!
Great read!
My review here. Especially impressed with the elegance of telling the story loyally from her protagonists point of view!