And when we got there, it really was like witnessing a beautiful dream.
Three Augusts in a row,Binti’s story came to me. It happened each time I returned to Buffalo, New York, after spending the summer with my family in the south Chicago suburbs of Illinois. In the August of 2016, I wanted to take a break from writing. I didn’t think I’d have the ending to Binti’s story for a while, years even, and I was fine with that. Then I sat down one evening and the entire story came to me. First the end, then the middle, then the beginning.
Over three days, I scribbled down the plot in the little Ankara cloth-covered journal I’d bought in the Lagos airport. But I didn’t answer the call to adventure immediately. I had courses to teach and another novel to edit. I went to South Africa and gazed at the Lion’s Head, went to the Arizona desert and followed a Pepsis wasp, I saw the White House while it was still worth seeing, and I had a conversation about microbes with a Ph.D. student during a lunch with the African Cultural Association at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. When winter break arrived, the moment I took off my professor hat to give the writer’s cap that I always wear some fresh air, whatever it is that takes hold of me to make me write descended on me.
So first and foremost I want to thank that thing that grabs, that whispers, that urgently tells. I’d like to thank my Ancestors, who walk in front of, behind, beside, fly above, and swim beneath me. Thanks to my daughter, Anyaugo, for demanding to know what happened to Okwu. Thanks to my editor Lee Harris and my agent, Don Maass, for their excellent feedback. And thanks to my beta reader Angel Maynard, who responded with, “Mind blown!” after reading the first clean draft. And finally, thank you to the rest of my immediate family, my mother, sisters Ifeoma and Ngozi, brother Emezie, nephews Dika and Chinedu, and niece Obioma. Without you all energizing my life, the Binti Trilogy would never ever have happened. I love you all.
Nnedi Okoraforwas born in the United States to two Igbo (Nigerian) immigrant parents. She holds a PhD in English and was a professor of creative writing at Chicago State University. She has been the winner of many awards for her short stories and young adult books, and won a World Fantasy Award for Who Fears Death . Nnedi’s books are inspired by her Nigerian heritage and her many trips to Africa.
DAW Books proudly presents the novels of Nnedi Okorafor:
WHO FEARS DEATH
THE BOOK OF PHOENIX
BINTI: THE COMPLETE TRILOGY
Binti | Binti: Home | Binti: The Night Masquerade
with Binti: Sacred Fire
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BINTI copyright © 2015 by Nnedi Okorafor.
BINTI: HOME copyright © 2017 by Nnedi Okorafor.
BINTI: THE NIGHT MASQUERADE copyright © 2018 by Nnedi Okorafor.
BINTI: SACRED FIRE copyright © 2019 by Nnedi Okorafor.
All Rights Reserved.
Jacket art by Greg Ruth.
Jacket design by Jim Tierney.
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DAW Book Collectors No. 1813.
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