Sade Adeniran
Sade Adeniran | |
---|---|
Born | London, England |
Nationality | Nigerian |
Alma mater | Plymouth University; University of Massachusetts |
Occupation | Novelist |
Notable work | Imagine This |
Awards | 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book (African region) |
Website | www |
Sade Adeniran (born 1960s) is a Nigerian novelist whose debut novel, Imagine This, won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book in Africa.[1] Imagine This was originally self-published by the author. Based in London,[2] she is also a filmmaker.[3]
Biography
[edit]Sade Adeniran was born in London, England, to Nigerian parents, and at the age of eight was taken back to her father's village in Nigeria,[2] spending her formative years living with her grandmother in Idogun, Ondo State, before returning to the UK.[4][5]
Adeniran earned degrees in Media and English from Plymouth University and also studied in the United States as an exchange student at the University of Massachusetts.[6] She began her writing career with a radio play written for a final-year university project and entitled Memories of a Distant Past; she submitted "on a whim" to the BBC, and it was produced in BBC Radio 4's "First Bite" Festival.[5] She subsequently wrote other theatre pieces, having her work performed in London at the Lyric Theatre, the Bush Theatre and the Riverside Studios.[citation needed]
She was employed as a business change consultant, while also working for five years on her first novel, Imagine This, describing the book's route to publication in the Brunel University newsletter Brunel Link in 2009: "Like most writers who dream of seeing their book in print, I went down the traditional route of sending my manuscript to publishers and agents but the responses were not positive – there didn't seem to be room in the marketplace for a story of a young girl growing up in rural Nigeria. After years of trying to repress my dream of becoming a published author, I finally plucked up the courage to do something. I realised that if I didn't believe in myself, no-one else would."[5] Having left her job, she decided to self-publish and in order to sell the 1100 copies she had printed, she created a website and dedicated herself to a marketing campaign that included appearances on local radio and television.[7]
Told through her diaries, Imagine This chronicles 10 years of the life of Lola, who is sent as a nine-year-old from her home in London to live with relatives in Nigeria.[8] In answer to whether the story is autobiographical, Adeniran says her response is always: "'It is and it isn't'. Some things in the book are based on real incidents. That village was where I grew up, but what happens to the character Lola is not what happened to me."[2] The novel won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book (African region), and was shortlisted for the World Book Day "Books to Talk About" award.[5] It was published by Cassava Republic Press in 2011.[9]
As a filmmaker, Adeniran is currently developing an adapted version of her novel, which reached the second round of the Sundance Screenwriters' Lab,[10][11] and won the British Urban Film Festival Award for Best Script Talent.[3] Her second film project is entitled A Mother's Journey,[12] and she is working on others.[13][14]
She is a contributor to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby.[15]
Bibliography
[edit]- Imagine This, SW Books, 2007, ISBN 978-0-9555453-0-6. Cassava Republic Press, 2011, ISBN 978 9784894357.
References
[edit]- ^ Molara Wood (April 2008). "Interview: Sade Adeniran". BBC. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011.
- ^ a b c Mary-Claire Wilson (4 May 2011). "Imaginary World: An Interview with Sade Adeniran". Spike Magazine.
- ^ a b "Sade Adeniran", Aké Festival 2016 Guests.
- ^ Suzanne Marie Ondrus, "Writing About Writing: African Women's Epistolary Narratives", University of Connecticut dissertation, 8 August 2014, p. 139, citing Yemi Adebisi Senior, "Counting Gains of Nigerian Authors in Democracy", Daily Independent (Lagos), 30 May 2010.
- ^ a b c d "Continuing plaudits for debut novelist", Brunel Link Newsletter (Brunel University Alumni Association), 2009, p. 18.
- ^ Suzanne Marie Ondrus, "Writing About Writing: African Women's Epistolary Narratives", University of Connecticut dissertation, 8 August 2014, p. 139.
- ^ Helen Caldwell, "Interview with Sade Adeniran", My Writing Life, 9 March 2009.
- ^ Omiyori Adebare, "Imagine This (by Sade Adeniran)", Africa Book Club, 10 October 2012.
- ^ Imagine This at Cassava Republic Press.
- ^ Sade. "In Development". Sades World. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
- ^ "Sade Adeniran's Novel To Become Animated Feature Film". NewsBreakers. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
- ^ "A Mother's Journey (official trailer)" at Vimeo, 2016.
- ^ "News", Sade's World.
- ^ More Cake at London International Black Film Festival, 10 November 2015.
- ^ Hubbard, Ladee (10 May 2019). "Power to define yourself: The diaspora of female black voices". TLS.
External links
[edit]- Author's website, Sade's World.
- Mary-Claire Wilson, "Imaginary World: An Interview with Sade Adeniran", Spike Magazine, 4 May 2011.
- Helen Caldwell, "Interview with Sade Adeniran", My Writing Life, 9 March 2009.
- "Interview with Nigerian Writer, Sade Adeniran", Geosi Reads.
- Nigerian women novelists
- Living people
- 21st-century Nigerian novelists
- Nigerian women film directors
- Alumni of the University of Plymouth
- University of Massachusetts Amherst alumni
- Black British women writers
- Black British writers
- English people of Yoruba descent
- Novelists from London
- 21st-century Nigerian women writers
- 1960s births
- Black British filmmakers
- Nigerian film directors