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kstones 's review for:
Notes on Grief
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Foremost her own story of her relationship with her father, but also eloquently relatable, giving voice to all of our grief.
“In Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Notes on Grief, the lament composed to honor and process the death of her father during the early days of the global COVID-19 pandemic, one of our century’s most gifted artists of language makes visceral the experience of death and grieving. In poetic bursts of imagistic prose that mirror the fracturing of self after the death of a beloved parent, Adichie constructs a narrative of mourning — of haunting and of love.”
— Hope Wabuke, NPR Book Reviews
“In Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Notes on Grief, the lament composed to honor and process the death of her father during the early days of the global COVID-19 pandemic, one of our century’s most gifted artists of language makes visceral the experience of death and grieving. In poetic bursts of imagistic prose that mirror the fracturing of self after the death of a beloved parent, Adichie constructs a narrative of mourning — of haunting and of love.”
— Hope Wabuke, NPR Book Reviews