
Mother-daughter relationships shape Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's return to fiction
She looks back at all the men she's been with, not as a body count, but as a dream count, as in the dreams of a life together never realized.
Despite some of the questionable men of her past, Chiamaka is still holding out hope for a relationship in which she is fully known by someone else — and tries to learn about herself from the frictions of her entanglements.
For Adichie, the isolation of COVID was the perfect backdrop for Chiamaka to undergo this introspection.
"It makes you aware of your own mortality," said Adichie on Bookends with Mattea Roach. "It gives you an opportunity to look inward in a way that ordinary life just doesn't."
However, the idea of being known by someone else can be elusive, she said, because it's almost impossible to totally know oneself.
In her own life, the sudden death of her father during lockdown showed her versions of herself she didn't recognize.
She explained that she saw herself as someone who reacts to difficult situations by "going cold" — but upon hearing that her father died, she was "taken aback by the melodrama" of her response.
"I threw myself down on the ground and I was pounding, pounding the floor and did not realize I was doing this. I was just so overtaken by the devastation of the news."
"I was surprised that I had reacted in that way," she said. "And so I started thinking about how much I knew myself and the idea that we can surprise ourselves and we do surprise ourselves."
Coming back to fiction
The bestselling author of novels Purple Hibiscus, Half of A Yellow Sun and Americanah, Adichie was born in Nigeria and now splits her time between there and the United States.
Americanah won the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction in 2013, but since then, Adichie has turned to nonfiction, writing powerful essays that became Ted Talks and short books, including We Should All Be Feminists, which was sampled by in Beyoncé's song Flawless and inspired a t-shirt from Dior.
Dream Count is Adichie's return to fiction after 12 years and it weaves the perspectives of four women, moving between Nigeria, Guinea and the United States.
She dedicates the book to her mother, who died in March 2021. And whereas her grief for her father left her grappling for language, she said that losing her mother actually brought her back to fiction.
"You're so unwilling to accept something that it then forces a different kind of eloquence on you," Adichie said. "I really think that my mother, in a kind of strange and spiritual way, I feel as though she kind of helped me start writing because she realized that I might go mad if I didn't."
You're so unwilling to accept something that it then forces a different kind of eloquence on you.
Unwittingly, Dream Count became a novel about the power of platonic love, celebrating female friendships and mother-daughter relationships.
"I did not even realize how much of the book was about mothers and daughters until I was almost done and I went back and read what I had," said Adichie. "My mother's spirit is here, I thought. In a more prosaic way, I'm dealing with my issues."
The mothers and daughters in Dream Count love each other very much — but sometimes don't understand each other — yet are there to support one another when times are difficult.
"Part of my grieving process has been regret because I think that there are times when I was short with my mother in ways that I did not need to be and it made me think about how mother-daughter relationships can be much more complicated and sometimes unnecessarily thorny than daughter-father relationships."
Lessons from motherhood
Adichie also now has a daughter and twin boys, an experience that has taught her a lot about herself.
"I've learned that I'm not endlessly patient," she said, laughing, and explained how powerful her feelings for her children are — a love and obsession that she could never have imagined.
But beyond that love for them, she's also gained a level of uncertainty that fuels her.
"I think I'm less smug and also slightly less sure," she said. "That has been good for me. Even just as a writer, there's a kind of uncertainty that I think feeds creativity."
"I'm still self-confident and I don't apologize for that. But maybe it's that terror at the heart of loving children. I'm just constantly worried about my children. I think it does something to you and I think I like what it's done for me."
While becoming a mother did help Adichie get closer to knowing herself, she's still uncertain about who she really is — and so are the characters in Dream Count.
"It just feels to me that it's something that we will always long for and never quite get there," she said. "But maybe the longing is the point."
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Montreal Gazette
19 hours ago
- Montreal Gazette
Brownstein: Jeannie Arsenault remembered as ‘the soul of Hillbilly Night' at N.D.G.'s Wheel Club
Hillbilly Night at N.D.G.'s Wheel Club will take on a more sombre tone than usual on Monday. The hootin' and hollerin' will probably be kept down to a minimal roar. Even the trusty cowbell, rung after a crowd-pleasing, country music performance, will probably sound relatively muted on this evening. The Hillbilly Night faithful, ever-loyal country musicians and fans, are in mourning. Jeannie Arsenault, the diminutive dynamo and spiritual force behind Hillbilly Night, died on Monday, July 28 at 82, succumbing to the cancer she had been battling since last fall. Arsenault, frequently attired in her favourite fire engine-red dress and customary country chapeau, was the spark plug who helped keep Hillbilly Night going against all odds through venue and musical taste changes. She remained true to the dream of the late Bob Fuller, leader of the Old Time Country Music Club of Canada when the soirees began. Fuller founded Hillbilly Night at the long-defunct downtown Blue Angel club nearly 60 years ago. After a few moves, it found a home in the endearingly ramshackle Wheel Club and managed to survive COVID. But after Fuller, who had been in ill health for a long period, died seven years ago, it was left to his disciple Arsenault, a Hillbilly Night performer for 50 years, to keep the fires burning. Arsenault was a no-nonsense yet much beloved figure. She made certain that the rules first established by Fuller were still strictly followed. The cardinal rule being that any instruments — save for the steel guitar — requiring an electrical boost from an amplifier were verboten. And drums, natch, were a no-no. And, oh yeah, no crooning or strumming of any country or bluegrass tune written or performed after 1965 — when it was deemed by some purists that Nashville took a turn for the electrical worse — were to be tolerated. It was and will always be hail to the Hanks, Williams and Snow, and, of course, to Arsenault fave Patsy Cline, among other pioneers from past eras. No one protests. The prevailing view among the faithful is — no disrespect to the strides made by Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter or the rap wailings of Shaboozey — that amplification has totally altered the country music sound and would truly drown out Hillbilly Night if permitted. Terry Joe 'Banjo' Rodrigues, one of the foremost pluckers in town of the instrument that bears his middle name, is one of the faithful. He has no problem adhering to these rules, fearing that the music he and others so love would be otherwise lost. A Hillbilly Night regular for 25 years, Rodrigues was extremely close to Arsenault. He visited her at her South Shore seniors' residence the night before she died. 'Jeannie had begged me not to come when I called her a few days before,' Rodrigues recalls. 'She told me she looked terrible, but I just felt I had to go. When I got there, she was sound asleep. She was on so much medication for the pain. She was so frail. It was heartbreaking. 'I pulled out my banjo and started to play one of Jeannie's favourite tunes, Grandpa Jones's Eight More Miles to Louisville. Though she seemed asleep, her hands started rising up while I played and she began calling out at me to get a little closer. She heard the banjo. That moment will stay with me forever. 'Bob (Fuller) had the vision to create it, but Jeannie was to become the soul of Hillbilly Night. Jeannie had the biggest heart of anyone I've ever known.' Rodrigues is in the midst of crafting a song in her memory, titled Ode to Little Jeannie's Gone, which he will perform at Monday's Hillbilly Night tribute to her. He sings me the chorus: 'She was little, but she was loud. She made country music proud. Little Jeannie, that gal from P.E.I. And now even though she's gone, We know her spirit will live on, 'Cause country music legends never die.' 'Jeannie's wish was that Hillbilly Night survive, and it has, thanks to her efforts,' Rodriguez says. 'It's going to keep going as strong as ever. A new generation of fans has come aboard and is loving it as much as us older folk are. 'But what's most sad is that Jeannie, our little Annie Oakley, won't be there, singing for us anymore. I'm just so thankful I have so many great memories of Jeannie, either playing with her or even getting deservedly scolded by her.' Rodrigues points out that Arsenault died last Monday night at 7, the same time the Wheel Club opened, 'when she would have been there to greet us.' Craig Morrison, ethnomusicologist, professor and performer of pretty much all known musical genres, has been a Hillbilly Night regular the last 40 years. 'Jeannie was a true force of nature,' Morrison says. 'It all started with me at the Blue Angel so many years ago, but what kept me coming me back then and through the ensuing years was the warm welcome Jeannie always gave me and everybody else who showed up. She captured our hearts.' He notes that Arsenault's special gift was making everyone feel at home. 'Hillbilly Night has always been a place where old and young, hip and square, professional and amateur, anglo and franco, were comfortable,' says Morrison, now No. 2 in terms of seniority after the inaptly named Bill Bland. 'There's absolutely no pretence here. Music has always been the common denominator, with acoustic country music and songs about things that people feel as its foundation. And there's a core group of a dozen of us to make sure the music never dies here. So many great memories of Jeannie will always remain.' My favourite Arsenault memory goes back four and a half years ago to the Hillbilly Night's 55 th anniversary at the Wheel Club. She did an inspired take on the Cline classic I Fall to Pieces. 'Now, don't go reading too much into me doing that song,' Arsenault gently admonished me upon leaving the stage to approving hoots and hollers and cowbells from the audience. 'I'm definitely not falling to pieces over our future.' True that, it has turned out. AT A GLANCE Hillbilly Night, Monday at the Wheel Club (3373 Cavendish Blvd.), will feature a musical tribute to Jeannie Arsenault. Doors open at 7 p.m. Admission, as always, is fr ee.


Edmonton Journal
3 days ago
- Edmonton Journal
Who is Sean Feucht and why is he controversial?
Article content Sean Feucht, a far-right U.S. Christian singer-songwriter and preacher, is scheduled to appear in West Kelowna and Abbotsford next month as part of his Let Us Worship: Revive in '25 tour. Article content The tour, however, has not been without its controversies across Canada. Article content Article content Here's what you should know about Sean Feucht ahead of his scheduled B.C. stops next month. Article content Who is Sean Feucht? Article content Feucht is a U.S. Christian singer-songwriter, preacher and founder of the Let Us Worship organization. He formerly led worship at the charismatic Bethel Church in Redding, Calif. and has released a number of worship albums. Article content He has espoused many of Donald Trump's MAGA ideologies and aligns with Christian nationalist views. Article content Feucht's Revive in '25 tour was set to visit more than two dozen cities across North America before running into cancellations in Eastern Canada. Those cancellations include Halifax, Charlottetown, Quebec City, Moncton, Gatineau and Vaughn. Article content Article content My official Statement on the Let Us Worship Canada Tour 🇨🇦🙏🏽 Here's the hard truth: If I had shown up with purple hair and a dress, claiming to be a woman, the government wouldn't have said a word. But to publicly profess deeply held Christian beliefs is to be labeled an… — Sean Feucht (@seanfeucht) July 24, 2025 Article content Why has Sean Feucht been controversial? Article content Article content Mass gatherings during COVID-19: During the height of the pandemic when health officials advised against large events, Feucht hosted mass gatherings across the U.S. under the guise of being worship gatherings. Feucht claimed the events were to protest lockdown restrictions, which he felt were oppressive to Christians, while critics pointed out the events flew in the face of public health advice and could be super-spreader events. Polarizing views on the Black Lives Matter movement: While Feucht has said he believes Black lives matter, he has publicly called the BLM movement 'shady' and a 'fraud,' and that 'we can't let our God-given empathy get hijacked by a dark movement with hidden agendas.' Article content Anti-LGBTQ views: In 2022, Feucht was among those who led anti-LGBTQ protests in Southern California in response to Disney's opposition of Florida's Don't Say Gay law. In 2023, he also posted online that ' the LGBTQ+ mafia is a cult bent on perverting and destroying the innocence of every child they can.' He also previous posted online that Pride Month 'is the month you discover which people, businesses, influencers, corporations & ministries have sold their soul to a demonic agenda seeking to destroy our culture and pervert our children.' Article content Article content Failed congressional campaign and anti-abortion views: In 2020, Feucht ran unsuccessfully under the Republican party for California's 3rd congressional district, on a platform that included anti-abortion views. During a campaign rally, Feucht criticized 'leaders who feverishly promote the slaughter of the unborn and the newborn.' Article content Article content Proud Boys security detail: At a 2021 gathering, Feucht shared a photo of his supposed security detail, noting that they included 'ex-military, ex-police, private security & most importantly LOVERS OF JESUS & freedom.' Some of the individuals identified in the group photo have been associated with the far-right Proud Boys extremist group and the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. 'If you mess with them or our 1st amendment right to worship God — you'll meet Jesus one way or another,' Feucht captioned the photo.


CBC
3 days ago
- CBC
20 powerful nonfiction books featured on Bookends with Mattea Roach
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He was a sports writer at the Toronto Star for over 18 years. His work highlights where sports intersect with off-the-field issues like race, culture, politics and business. His memoir My Fighting Family is his first book. Hope is a Woman's Name by Amal Elsana Alh'jooj A Bedouin Palestinian activist born in Israel, Amal Elsana Alh'jooj shares her life's story in Hope is a Woman's Name. Starting with her early childhood and spanning her activist career thus far, she shares her fight for justice, peace and equality. Alh'jooj is a professor at McGill University and a founder of several NGOs including Arab-Jewish Centre for Equality and Economic Empowerment and Cooperation. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 and won the New Israel Fund's Human Rights Award in 2013. She is the founder and executive director of the organization PLEDJ (Promoting Leadership, Empowerment, Development and Justice). Soft As Bones by Chyana Marie Sage In Soft As Bones, Chyana Marie Sage shares the pain of growing up with her father, a crack dealer who went to prison for molesting her older sister, and the self-destructive ways with which she coped. By revisiting her family's history, she describes the experience of overcoming generational trauma that began with her grandfather, who was forcibly separated from his family through residential schools and the Sixties Scoop. She reflects on how the traditions of her Cree culture played a crucial role in her healing. Sage is a Cree, Métis and Salish writer based in Edmonton. Her journalism has appeared in the Toronto Star, Huff Post and the New Quarterly. Sage won first place in the Edna Staebler Personal Essay Contest and silver in the National Magazine Awards for her essay Soar. She holds an MFA in creative nonfiction from Columbia University where she taught as an adjunct professor. She also teaches Indigenous youth about cultivating self-love and healing through the Connected North program. 52 Ways to Reconcile by David A. Robertson 52 Ways to Reconcile is a guide for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous people who want to take action when it comes to reconciliation — and shows how we can work together on the long road ahead. Robertson, a two-time Governor General's Literary Award winner and member of the Norway House Cree Nation, has written more than 30 books for both children and adults, including the Misewa Saga series, picture books On the Trapline and When We Were Alone, graphic novel Breakdown, and his memoirs Black Water and All The Little Monsters. He lives in Winnipeg. The Vinyl Diaries by Pete Crighton Growing up in the midst of the HIV/AIDS epidemic left Pete Crighton with a huge fear of sex — and he threw himself into music as a way to cope with those anxieties. 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Sucker Punch by Scaachi Koul In Sucker Punch, Scaachi Koul candidly recounts the painful events that turned her life upside down, from her marriage falling apart to her mother's cancer diagnosis and everything in between. With her signature humour, Koul reflects on navigating struggle — shifting from her belief that fighting is the only way out — to exploring when to fight and when to let go in the face of life's unexpected challenges. Koul is a writer from Calgary who currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Her debut book, , was a New York Times Editors' Choice and a finalist for the Leacock Medal for Humor and the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize. She is currently a Senior Writer at Slate and co-hosts the Ambie Award-winning podcast Scamfluencers. Koul also co-hosted the Emmy-nominated Netflix series Follow This, and her work has been published in The New Yorker, This American Life, New York Magazine and The Cut. She has also appeared in documentaries such as Quiet On Set and Pretty Baby. Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green In Everything Is Tuberculosis, John Green looks into the different ways tuberculosis has been perceived over centuries — and how that shapes who lives and dies from it today. Green is the author of bestselling young adult novels including Looking for Alaska, The Fault in Our Stars and Turtles All the Way Down. He has won a Printz Medal, a Printz Honor and an Edgar Award. He is the writer and host of the podcast The Anthropocene Reviewed and has worked with his brother, Hank, on video projects like Vlogbrothers and Crash Course. He lives in Indianapolis, Indiana. Hounds of Love by Leah Kardos As part of Bloomsbury Publishing's 33 ⅓ series, in which each title dives into a single music album, writer and musician Leah Kardos wrote about Kate Bush's album Hounds of Love in a book of the same name. In it, she explores her connection to the album, its rise to popularity and its resurgence, nearly 40 years later. 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She was also longlisted for the 2018 CBC Nonfiction Prize. is her first book and her essay Foreign Bodies will be included in the forthcoming Best Canadian Essays anthology. Black in Blues by Imani Perry Imani Perry's latest book, Black in Blues, is an evocative exploration of what the colour blue can tell us about being Black in the United States today — and the extraordinary human capacity to find beauty in the face of devastation. Perry is an American author, scholar and professor at Harvard University. She's written several other nonfiction books including South to America which won the National Book Award in 2022. Acme Novelty Datebook: Volume Three by Chris Ware Acme Novelty Datebook: Volume Three is the third and final instalment of a series that offers readers a look into American cartoonist Chris Ware's personal sketchbooks. covers the last 20 years and tells of his journey into fatherhood and the rise of social media. Ware is the author and illustrator of Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth, which won the Guardian First Book Award in 2001, Building Stories and Rusty Brown, which was a finalist for the PEN/Jean Stein award. He has designed 32 covers for The New Yorker and his work has been exhibited in many museums worldwide. Here After by Amy Lin Here After tells the powerful love story between Amy Lin and her husband, Kurtis, and how she copes with his sudden death. Lin shares how this loss upended her ideas of grief, strength and memory. Lin is a Calgary-based writer whose work has been published in Ploughshares. She has also received residencies from Yaddo and Casa Comala. Here After is her first book and was shortlisted for the 2024 Hilary Weston Prize for Nonfiction. Q&A by Adrian Tomine Before the Internet, many comic books included a section to send letters to the creators and get insight into their work and their process. When cartoonist Adrian Tomine was growing up, he would send those letters — and now he's answering them. Q&A dives into the questions he most often hears from readers, and responds to them with a combination of words, photos and illustrations. Something, Not Nothing by Sarah Leavitt Following the medically assisted death of her partner of 22 years, cartoonist Sarah Leavitt began small sketches that quickly became something new and unexpected to her — the graphic memoir Something, Not Nothing. The abstract images mixed with poetic text, layers of watercolour, ink and coloured pencil combine to tell a story of love, grief, peace and new beginnings. All Our Ordinary Stories by Teresa Wong In the graphic memoir All Our Ordinary Stories, Teresa Wong uses spare black-and-white illustrations and thought-provoking prose to unpack how intergenerational trauma and resilience can shape our identities. Starting with her mother's stroke a decade ago, Wong takes a journey through time and place to find the origin of her feelings of disconnection from her parents. Wong is the Calgary-based author of the graphic memoir Dear Scarlet, which was on the Canada Reads longlist in 2020 and was a finalist for the City of Calgary W.O. Mitchell Book Prize. Her work has appeared in The Believer, The New Yorker, McSweeney's and The Walrus. CBC Books named her a writer to watch in 2019. Everything and Nothing At All by Jenny Heijun Wills Everything and Nothing At All is an essay collection that discusses Jenny Heijun Wills' quest for belonging as a transnational and transracial adoptee, a pansexual and polyamorous person and a parent with a life-long eating disorder. Drawing on her life experiences, she creates a vision of family — chosen, adopted and biological all at once. Wills is a writer born in Seoul and raised in Southern Ontario. Her memoir Older Sister. Not Necessarily Related won the 2019 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Award for Nonfiction and the 2020 Eileen McTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book. She currently lives in Winnipeg and teaches English at the University of Winnipeg. The Knowing by Tanya Talaga The Knowing starts with the life of Tanya Talaga's great-great grandmother Annie Carpenter and charts the violence she and her family experienced for decades at the hands of the Church and the government. Talaga is a writer and journalist of Anishinaabe and Polish descent. She is a member of Fort William First Nation. Her book Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death and Hard Truths in a Northern City won the RBC Taylor Prize, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing and the First Nation Communities Read: Young Adult/Adult Award. Her book All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward was the basis for the 2018 CBC Massey Lectures. Degrees of Separation by Alison McCreesh Degrees of Separation blends stories, drawings and sketches that chronicle Alison McCreesh's decade spent living in the North. From being stranded in the High Arctic to raising a baby in a small shack with no running water, the book is a coming-of-age story that recounts the challenges and joys of life living and working north of the 60th parallel. McCreesh is an artist who currently lives in Yellowknife. She has travelled around the Arctic and sub-Arctic and the theme of contemporary day-to-day life in the North carries through her creative work. Grief is for People by Sloane Crosley When American writer Sloane Crosley first met Russell Perreault, he was her boss for a publishing job at Vintage Books. The two became fast friends, both in and out of the office, taking on the literary world and beyond for most of Crosley's adult life. Exactly a month after a break-in shook up Crosley's sense of security, Perreault died by suicide, leaving her with profound pain, confusion and grief. In Grief is for People, Crosley reckons with the grief of losing her best friend using philosophy and art as a framework, writing with her trademark irreverence and honesty.