Akwaeke Emezi (they/them) is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Death of Vivek Oji, which was shortlisted for the Dylan Thomas Prize; Pet, a finalist for the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature; and Freshwater, which was named a New York Times Notable Book and shortlisted for the PEN/Hemingway Award, the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award, the Lambda Literary Award, and the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize. Selected as a 5 Under 35 honoree by the National Book Foundation, they are based in liminal spaces.
Praise for The Death of Vivek Oji:
“[A] dazzling, devastating story . . . A puzzle wrapped in
beautiful language, raising questions of identity and loyalty that
are as unanswerable as they are important.” —The New York Times
Book Review
“Electrifying” —O: The Oprah Magazine
“Brilliant . . . This is a book full of line-level beauty; a book
of multiple perspectives, each rendered organically and fully; a
book of mystery and community and love. . . . A special read that
will not soon be forgotten.” —Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, author
of Friday Black
“Remarkably assured and graceful. . . . Emezi has once again
encouraged us to embrace a fuller spectrum of human experience.”
—The Washington Post
“This affecting novel of self-invention . . . poses searching
questions about gender and acceptance.” —The New Yorker
“Instead of getting flattened by death, Vivek becomes more vivid on
each page. He glows like the sun, impossible to look at directly
yet utterly charismatic. I missed him when the novel was done.”
—NPR
“One of the most highly acclaimed novels of 2020.” —Newsweek
“Powerful . . . [a] slim book that contains as wide a range of
experience as any saga — a little bit like Vivek’s brief yet
gloriously expansive life.” —Los Angeles Times
“One of the best books of 2020. . . . a vivid, propulsive
experience. . . . about freedom and our capacity to imagine
what it’s like to be someone else, or perhaps, more so, what it’s
like to experience them as they are.” — Goop
“A testament to Emezi’s immense literary prowess.” —Elle
“Brilliant . . . [A] beautifully tragic story of self-determined
wellness, peculiar belonging, communal acceptance, and pursuing
what one wants from love . . . this book is a liminal force that
determines, in its own tricky way, the path to a life worth
knowing.” –Oluwantomisin Oredein, The Christian Century
“Equal parts heartwarming and emotionally shattering, the life and
death of Vivek Oji is truly unforgettable.” —Teen Vogue
“Emezi has a gift for prose that is often as visceral, tender and
heartbreaking as what it describes. . . . While the novel sets out
to solve the mystery of Oji’s death, what gives it power is how it
uncovers the story of a person shielded by the peace of
self-acceptance against the pain of the world. Here is proof of
what good fiction does best: it is an antidote to invisibility.”
—The Guardian
“Emezi’s tender prose deftly depicts the inner lives of Vivek,
Osita and those around them. . . . While the mystery surrounding
Vivek’s death is finally revealed towards the end of this
spellbinding mystery, what proves most satisfying is all that is
learnt in the search for truth.” —Financial Times
“Emezi is a beacon of literary genius… in Emezi’s skilled hands,
the mosaic of love, pain, community, family, trauma, and beauty,
that make the crown to which Vivek is the bloody jewel, is crafted
into an unforgettable and deeply moving story.” —Lambda
Literary
“A robust literary triumph. . . . A sensitively drawn, achingly
beautiful portrayal of the boundaries of personal, gender and
societal identities.” —Chicago Review of Books
“While there are many books that stay with us long after we put
them down,The Death of Vivek Oji is as permanent as a tattoo.”
—Paper Mag
“Equal parts brilliant and heartbreaking as readers are taken
on a journey to discover the hidden parts of Vivek's life
and the mystery surrounding his death.”
—Marie Claire
“[One] of our greatest living writers, Akwaeke Emezi is back .
. . . a story of chosen family, discovery, love, pain, grief,
and how colonialism infects individuals and
nations.” —Shondaland
“Electrifying . . . The Death of Vivek Oji is a masterful
contemplation on gender identity and fluidity, the heavy weight of
shame, and the importance of having friends and family who accept
you rather than attempt to ‘fix’ you.” — Salon
“Propulsive and resonant. . . . Emezi is a dazzling literary
talent whose works cut to the quick of the spiritual self.”
—Esquire
“Although Akwaeke Emezi introduces us to Vivek Oji in death[,] it
is his life that will resonate with readers, long after they've
turned this book's final page.” — Refinery29
“A work of elegant musicality and ingenuity [that draws] the
reader into a world of memories, talismans, photographs, spirits,
and intimacies.” —Myriam Gurba, Zora
“A masterful winding and unwinding of the tethers of love, shame,
identity, intimacy, and violence. . . . The story takes us into the
intimate worlds of each character, with chapters moving fluidly
between consciousness and the voice that sees all of them moving
and making choices. . . . [The Death of Vivek Oji] made me want to
live.” —Man Repeller
“The Death of Vivek Oji is an alchemy of personal family story
and untouchable myth. It circles itself, like a shark preparing to
take down its prey; reader, you will be disarmed.” —LitHub
“An astonishing book . . . With warmth and great detail, Emezi
explores the complicated friction of cultural clashes and the loss
of youthful innocence.” —Stylist
“A deep, tender look at a family unraveling around the tragic
and early loss of someone they loved but never understood. . . .
beautifully captures an ordinary family in all its loving, hurtful,
messy glory.” —Shelf Awareness
“Emezi offers a richly textured depiction of a middle-class
community in Nigeria . . . Vividly written and deeply
affecting.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Praise for Akwaeke Emezi:
“Dazzling.” —Los Angeles Times
“Extraordinarily powerful.” —Edwidge Danticat, The New
Yorker
“Remarkable and daring.” —The New York Times Book Review
“The arrival of a major talent.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“Akwaeke Emezi parts the seas of the self.” —Vanity
Fair
“Like watching the beginning of something big.” —Vox
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