Akwaeke Emezi is an Igbo and Tamil writer and artist based in liminal spaces. Born and raised in Nigeria, they received their MPA from New York University and was awarded a 2015 Miles Morland Writing Scholarship. They won the 2017 Commonwealth Short Story Prize for Africa. Their work has been published in various literary magazines, including Granta. Freshwater is their debut novel.
Praise for Freshwater: Finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award for a
Debut Novel
A National Book Foundation "5 Under 35" Honoree
Shortlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize
Winner of the Otherwise Award
A New York Times Notable Book
Named a Best Book of the Year by the New Yorker, BuzzFeed, Literary
Hub, Amazon, NPR, the Chicago Public Library, Electric Literature,
Bustle, Refinery29, Entropy, BookPage, Shelf Awareness, and the
Globe and Mail
Named a Best Debut Novel of 2018 by Entertainment Weekly
Finalist for the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction
Longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction, the Andrew Carnegie
Medal, the Brooklyn Public Library Literary Prize, andthe VCU
Cabell First Novelist Award
A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
A New York Times Book Review Paperback Row Selection
An Amazon Top 10 Book Pick (February 2018)
"An extraordinarily powerful and very different kind of physical
and psychological migration story."--Edwidge Danticat, New Yorker
"A witchy, electrifying story of danger and compulsion . . .
Freshwater recounts the 'litany of madness' suffered by Ada in a
serpentine prose that proceeds by oblique, hypnotizing movements
before it sinks its fangs into you . . . As striking and mysterious
as the ways of the gods who narrate it . . . The latest standout in
this exciting boom in the Nigerian novel." --Sam Sacks, Wall Street
Journal "The novel is based in many of the realities of the
writer's life, but the prose is infused with imaginative lyricism
and tone . . . The journey undertaken in the novel is swirling and
vivid, vicious and painful, and rendered by Emezi in [sharp and
glittering] shards . . . Emezi's lyrical writing, her alliterative
and symmetrical prose, explores the deep questions of otherness, of
a single heart and soul hovering between, the gates open, fighting
for peace." --Susan Straight, Los Angeles Times "A startling debut
novel explores the freedom of being multiple . . . Igbo
spirituality, Emezi radically suggests, has as much to offer as any
[Western] schemas when it comes to decrypting human folly or
transcendence . . . The book would have made grim sense through a
mental-health lens; instead, it is an indigenous fairy tale . . .
The book becomes a study in dysphoria--not precisely the distress
of being misgendered but the more nebulous pain of being imprisoned
in a physical form, of losing your wraith-like ability to evade
categorization . . . There is something self-defeating about trying
to trace a self that is defined by indefinability; one achievement
of Emezi's book is to make that paradox feel generously fertile."
--Katy Waldman, New Yorker "Remarkable and daring . . . Poetic and
disturbing . . . Rooting Ada's story in Igbo cosmology forces us to
further question our paradigm for what causes mental illness and
how it manifests. It causes us to question science and reason."
--Tariro Mzezewa, New York Times "Akwaeke Emezi is a name you will
want to remember, because surely it is one you will be hearing
again and again . . . A stunning and disorienting story about a
broken woman trying to overcome the pain of her human life while
straddling 'the other side' . . . Freshwater is unlike any novel I
have ever read. Its shape-shifting perspective is radical and
innovative, twisting the narrative voices like the bones of a
python . . . Emezi has not only made a rich contribution to Igbo
mythology, she has crafted a novel so unique and fresh, it feels as
if the medium has been reinvented." --Safa Jinje, Toronto Star
"Akwaeke Emezi's bewitching and heart-rending Freshwater is a
coming-of-age novel like no other . . . For anyone who has
experienced life as a misfit or outcast, this is a resonant
rendition . . . For all its sheer invention, Freshwater feels more
like an interpretive journey through uncharted territory with an
experienced guide. Potent and moving, knowing and strange, this is
a powerful and irresistibly unsettling debut." --David Wright,
Seattle Times "A new kind of bildungsroman . . . Probably better
called a work of autofiction . . . Freshwater reimagines the genre
of psychological self-portrait. Ada suffers the slings and arrows
of mental torture more than the average protagonist. She finds a
kind of peace, however, in identifying her conflicting and
compartmentalized selfhoods as ọgbanje . . . The ọgbanje are so
useful precisely because they offer an alternative to metaphor, an
alternative to literary device--they bring the marvelous and the
near-imaginary to the realm of autofiction." --Josephine
Livingstone, New Republic "Ground-shaking . . . It is a battle for
a body and a soul, and the stakes are high." --Nadja Spiegelman,
Paris Review "Akwaeke Emezi . . . is a literary trickster, an
Afropolitan who glides between US and Nigerian cultures, mores, and
faiths . . . The great trick of this novel is that we want not only
peace for Ada, but also for the troubled spirits inhabiting, and
one with, her. Reading Emezi's unfolding integration of fictional
forms and modes of thinking--spiritual, analytical, historical,
cultural, clinical--you feel like you are witnessing a talented and
emotionally astute writer finding her voice(s). Freshwater is a
dazzling, problematic debut that promises so much more." --Rob
Spillman, Guernica "Stunning . . . The talk of the literary town .
. . Exceptional . . . A novel that sidesteps contemporary fiction's
more obvious beats . . . The story veers into harrowing territory .
. . but it's so imaginative and dreamy and lyrical that a light
still shines through." --David Canfield, Entertainment Weekly
"Feels like watching the beginning of something big: [Freshwater]
is so shivery, so electric, that the first coherent thought you can
put together as you read is that you're watching a major new talent
beginning to carve out a space for herself . . . Freshwater,
ultimately, is not a book about giving in to one's demons, but
about living with them. It's about finding a home within liminal
spaces--between genders, between life and death, between god and
human--and finding a way to play within them. And Emezi's voice is
enormously playful, playing with the rhythms of sentences and the
conflicting and contrasting voices in Ada's head . . . And she's
just getting started. One of the most exciting things about this
book is imagining what Emezi will bring us next." --Constance
Grady, Vox "This debut novel by an Igbo and Tamil writer is an
intricately plotted story of fractured identity that signals the
arrival of a major talent." --San Francisco Chronicle "Emezi's
voice is hypnotic and powerful and imaginative, leaving the reader
unsure of what in the story is real and what is not . . . It's a
story that will remind you of the importance of reading . . . In a
world crammed to the heavens with unnecessary books, this is a book
that demands to exist as a book . . . Take a long, slow swim in
Freshwater to remind yourself why you love reading in the first
place." --Seattle Review of Books "Nigerian-born author Emezi
presents an emotionally charged debut with her novel, Freshwater .
. . Emezi's prose is vibrant and terrifying; she portrays Ada's
tribulations with breathtaking detail. Freshwater is a novel of
unforgiving spirituality told in a manner that is sophisticated,
precise and elegant." --IndiePicks Magazine "Freshwater is sheer
perfection: sexy, sensual, spiritual, wise. One of the most
dazzling debuts I've ever read." --Taiye Selasi, Guardian "Akwaeke
Emezi parts the seas of the self in her engrossing debut novel,
Freshwater."--Sloane Crosley, Vanity Fair "Part magical realism,
part meditation on mental illness . . . Ada's struggle provides a
thought-provoking and visceral exploration of life with an altered
state of mind." --Harper's Bazaar "Harrowing yet beautiful . . .
Racing through [Freshwater] felt disrespectful--To the gods? To
Emezi? To literature itself?--for [it] is the kind of novel that
deserves, no, demands immersion and focus. Every sentence left me
reeling, every paragraph on the edge of my seat, and every chapter
begging for more. I could've spent hundreds of pages more in
Emezi's lush creation . . . For a debut novelist, Akwaeke Emezi has
successfully pulled off what many longtime writers only dream of
doing. It's an astonishing, haunting, stunning piece of work."
--Tor.com "Ambitious and original . . . Befitting a story about a
fractured mind, the style of the novel is unconventional. Not only
does Emezi write in multiple voices, but the story also progresses
in a nonlinear fashion . . . Brilliant." --Zyzzyva "Emezi's tale of
Ada's journey is astonishing."--Jane Ciabattari, BBC "Powerful . .
. readers are sure to hold their breath."--Bustle "Akwaeke Emezi
has a brilliant voice and her perspective, being non-binary, trans,
and an ogbanje spirit herself, lends the novel its heart. The story
pushes back against the typical Western language and ideas
surrounding gender and consciousness, and rejects colonialism's
attempt to delegitimize Nigerian traditions and Igbo spirituality."
--Interview "Far surpasses your average edgy coming-of-age novel .
. . A gripping read that deftly achieves what many postmodern books
strive for--a discussion and interrogation of the fractured
self--in a way that puts its contemporaries to shame. It is
clearer, faster, more intimate, and more inventive than many other
topically comparative books . . . A remarkable take on human
interiority."--Riveter "Freshwater is the first novel from Akwaeke
Emezi, marking the beginning of what will surely be a long, storied
career. Strikingly original and impossible to put down, it tracks
the life of a Nigerian woman--from birth through to her adulthood
unraveling--and will leave you breathless by the very end." --
PopSugar "Akwaeke Emezi's debut Freshwater is a completely unique
novel that explores the fragmented selves of a Nigerian woman named
Ada. Narrated from multiple perspectives, Freshwater is a dynamic
encounter with selfhood, mental illness and the complex experience
of being." -- Culture Trip (UK) "The feat of this novel is Emezi's
language to describe the experience of gods--Freshwater is a true
original." -- Globe and Mail "Emezi's powerful and poetic debut
deftly mines the complicated world of mental illness." -- Business
Insider "Emezi has established herself as a young writer to watch
with an engrossing tale of identity, mental illness and
spirituality . . . Emezi's careful structuring and poetic language
provides a pleasing balance to keep us stabilized as we reach
toward high planes. Reading Freshwater, then, is akin to letting
oneself over to a luminous experience; we are enveloped fully from
page one, and leave the novel feeling transformed." -- Iowa Gazette
"Lyrical and dazzling . . . an intimate, spiritual, and haunting
story; one that feels both unique and relatable in its exploration
of identity, coming of age, and living with trauma and mental
illness. A stunning, genre-bending debut novel from a brilliant new
writer--reading Freshwater is a transportive, otherworldly
experience." --Shondaland "In her mind-blowing debut, Emezi weaves
traditional Igbo myth that turns the well-worn narrative of mental
illness on its head, and in doing so she has ensured a place on the
literary-fiction landscape as a writer to watch . . . Emezi's
brilliance lies not just in her expert handling of the conflicting
voices in Ada's head but in delivering an entirely different
perspective on just what it means to go slowly mad. Complex and
dark, this novel will simultaneously challenge and reward lovers of
literary fiction. A must-read." --Booklist (starred review) "[A]
spiritually lush and tough yet lyrical debut . . . A gorgeous,
unsettling look into the human psyche, richly conceived yet
accessible to all." --Library Journal (starred review) "[An]
enthralling, metaphysical debut novel . . . Emezi's talent is
undeniable. She brilliantly depicts the conflict raging in the
'marble room' of Ada's psyche, resulting in an impressive debut."
--Publishers Weekly "[A] haunting yet stunning exploration of
mental illness grounded in traditional Nigerian spirituality . . .
Employing precise and poetic yet accessible prose, Emezi
brilliantly crafts distinct voices for each of Ada's selves and
puts them in conversation with each other . . . She balances
multiple lands, ethnicities, perspectives and belief systems with
the ease of a writer far beyond her age and experience. Freshwater
is a brutally beautiful rumination on consciousnesses and belief
and a refreshing contribution to our literary landscape."
--BookPage "Akwaeke Emezi's standout first novel, Freshwater, is a
riveting and peculiar variation on coming of age . . . The poetics
of Emezi's prose enhance the mythology she evokes. As enchanting as
it is unsettling, Freshwater tickles all six senses. The chorus of
voices narrating Ada's life achieves a remarkable balance between
cruel machinations of cavalier deities and deep empathy for the
distressed vessel they inhabit . . . dazzling." --Shelf Awareness
"Akwaeke Emezi's debut, Freshwater, is this silk, a slim novel so
rooted in its lineage and yet so bright, putting thoughts together
in new ways, crafting a devastating and exuberant work. One almost
cannot believe that Emezi is using the words we are used to using,
because she transmutes them into a story that, while accessible and
often relatable, is entirely its own. She breathes new dimensions
into language and story. You would be hard-pressed to find a
reader, any reader, who could complete this book and fail to call
it a masterpiece." -- Book Reporter "In Emezi's remarkable debut
novel, Freshwater, we enter the lives of our protagonist, starting
in Nigeria and ending in the United States. Every page is imbued
with radiant prose, and a chorus of poetic voices. With a plot as
alive and urgent as it is relatable, Freshwater is also solidly its
own, brims with its unique preoccupations. Never before have I read
a novel like it--one that speaks to the unification and separation
of bodies and souls, the powers or lack thereof of gods and humans,
and the long and arduous journey to claiming our many selves, or to
setting our many selves free." --Chinelo Okparanta, author of Under
The Udala Trees "With this stunning debut, Akwaeke Emezi has
blessed us with nothing less than a masterpiece. Freshwater is a
journey of loss and reconciliation, home and heartbreak, and
ultimately a survivor's guide to harmonizing spirit and flesh.
Quite simply a gorgeous, elegant, and brutal work of truthtelling.
To repeat: A masterpiece." --Daniel Jos� Older, New York Times
bestselling author of The Shadowshaper Cypher series "Wow. The net
effect is a feeling of being peeled open, and quickly finding that
skinless place to be normal. More than any novel I can remember, it
feels utterly present to the place we are in the world."
--Binyavanga Wainaina, author of One Day I Will Write About This
Place "Akwaeke Emezi is a major, exhilarating talent." --NoViolet
Bulawayo, Booker-shortlisted author of We Need New Names "What if
we were not one person, but three in one body--created by careless
gods who forgot to 'close the gate'? Akwaeke Emezi's novel,
Freshwater, paints a fiercely unique, unforgettable story of
identity, mental health and the world beyond ours. This impressive
debut is lyrical and well-told." --Tananarive Due, author of Ghost
Summer "A clarion call to those of us who find that our minds are
more haunted and complex than that of the status quo. In exquisite,
unearthly prose, Akwaeke Emezi renders the ordinary strange and the
strange, ordinary--making Freshwater the most stunning debut novel
I've read in years. An unforgettable literary experience." --Esm�
Weijun Wang, author of The Border of Paradise "Freshwater is one of
those dazzling novels that defies these kinds of descriptions. We
can gesture to the story--set in Nigeria and America, told by all
the selves of its Tamil/Igbo protagonist--but such synthesis fails
to convey the magic that awaits its reader. At once fiction and
memoir, potent in its spiritual richness and sexual frankness, the
text seems not to have been written by but channeled through its
brilliant author. This may be Emezi's debut novel but she is an
old--an ancient--storyteller: thrillingly at home in the tradition
of griots, poets, seers and seekers." --Taiye Selasi, author of
Ghana Must Go
Ask a Question About this Product More... |