Ratings7
Average rating4.7
From the internationally acclaimed, bestselling author of We Should All Be Feminists and Americanah, a profound reckoning with loss, written in the wake of her father’s death. During the brutal summer of 2020, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s beloved father, a celebrated professor at the University of Nigeria and an irreplaceable figure in a close-knit family, succumbed unexpectedly to complications of kidney failure. Notes on Grief is Adichie’s tribute to him, and a moving meditation on loss. Here Adichie offers a candid snapshot of the shock, loneliness, and disillusionment that followed the news of her father’s death. Her family, unable to be together except for on video calls, struggles to go through the rites of mourning amid a global crisis of unimaginable scale. As Adichie wrestles with his passing, she recalls with vivid, poignant detail who her father was: a remarkable survivor of the Biafran war, a man of kindness and charm, and a fierce supporter of his youngest daughter. Here is a uniquely personal, profound work of remembrance and hope by one of today’s luminaries—a book to bring us together in a time when we need it most.
Reviews with the most likes.
I love Adichie's writing so much, the way she describes losing her father and grief is just so good. It's so heartbreakingly sad. You can just feel the love she has for her father and after reading this book I feel like in a way I love him too because to her, he was such an amazing father.
i picked it up randomly and couldnt stop reading. the writting was so beautiful and there was so many passages I highlighted and related to. i dont wanna rate it bc its a very personal book so it feels weird but i loved it and it made me tear up a couple times