Taiye Selasi

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Taiye Selasi
Born Taiye Selasi
(1979-11-02) 2 November 1979
London, United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist
Nationality British
Ethnicity Nigerian, Ghanaian
Alma mater Yale University; Nuffield College, Oxford
Period 2005-present
Literary movement Realism, Drama

Taiye Selasi (born 2 November 1979) is a writer and photographer of Nigerian and Ghanaian origin.[1]

Early life and education

Selasi was born in London, England, and raised in Brookline, Massachusetts, the elder of twin daughters in a family of physicians. She graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a BA in American Studies from Yale, and earned her MPhil in International Relations from Nuffield College, Oxford.[2]

Taiye means first twin in her mother's native Yoruba.

Selasi's twin sister, Dr. Yetsa Kehinde Tuakli, is a physiatrist in the US. A passionate champion of African paralympians, Tuakli competes in the long jump for Ghana's national team.[3] Selasi's mother, Dr. Juliette Tuakli, is a pediatrician in Ghana.[4][5] Renown for her advocacy of children's rights, she sits on the board of United Way. Selasi's father, Dr. Lade Wosornu, is a surgeon in Saudi Arabia.[6] Considered one of Ghana's foremost public intellectuals, he has published numerous volumes of poetry.[7][8]

Selasi's parents split when she was an infant. She met her biological father at the age of 12.[9]

Career

In 2005 The LIP Magazine published "Bye-Bye, Babar (Or: What is an Afropolitan?)",[10] Selasi's seminal text on Afropolitans. The same year she penned a play, which was produced at a small theater by Dr. Avery Willis, Toni Morrison's niece.[11]

In 2006 Morrison gave Selasi a one-year deadline; Selasi wrote "The Sex Lives of African Girls" to meet it. The story, published by UK literary magazine Granta in 2011, appears in Best American Short Stories 2012.[12]

In 2010 Ann Godoff at Penguin Press bought Selasi's unfinished novel. Ghana Must Go, selected as one of the 10 Best Books of 2013 by the Wall Street Journal and The Economist, has been sold in 16 countries as of 2014.[13][14]

In 2012 Selasi launched a documentary series about African millennials in Central, Sahel, North, South, East and West Africa.

In 2013 she was selected as one of Granta′s 20 Best Young British Writers.[15]

Works

Novels

  • Ghana Must Go (2013)

Short stories

  • The Sex Lives of African Girls (2011)
  • Driver (2013)

References

External links

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