A. Igoni Barrett

A. Igoni Barrett
Born March 26, 1979
Port Harcourt, Nigeria
Language English
Nationality Nigeria
Genre Short Stories
Notable awards Chinua Achebe Center Fellowship

Adrian Igonibo Barrett (born 26 March 1979) is a Nigerian writer.

Career

He was born in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, to a Nigerian mother and the Jamaican novelist and poet Lindsay Barrett.[1]

Igoni Barrett was a winner of the BBC World Service short story competition for 2005 with a story entitled "The Phoenix", which was broadcast on 2 January 2006.[2][3] His first book, a collection of short stories entitled From Caves of Rotten Teeth, was first published in 2005 and reissued in 2008.

Invited as a participant to various literary festivals, Barrett was a guest reader on the opening night of the PEN World Voices Festival in 2013.[4] He was the founding organizer of the BookJam reading series[5] in Lagos, Nigeria, which featured the writers Jude Dibia, Michela Wrong, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Binyavanga Wainaina, Helon Habila and Tsitsi Dangarembga, among others.

Igoni Barrett was awarded a Chinua Achebe Center Fellowship in 2010. In 2011, he was awarded a Norman Mailer Center Fellowship[6] as well as a Bellagio Center Residency.[7]

His second collection of stories Love Is Power, or Something Like That was published in 2013;[8] according to the Boston Globe, the collection "pulses with an indomitable life force that is, by turns, tender and fierce".[9] Time Out New York commented: "These rich pieces are also brilliantly sequenced.... Shifts in mood happen throughout the book.... Unlikely moments of empathy occur again and again amid wrenching drama and subtle comedy; the resulting collection satisfies on numerous levels."[10] Love is Power, or Something Like That was chosen as a "best book of 2013" by NPR[11] and Flavorwire.[12]

In April 2014 Igoni Barrett was named as one of 39 sub-Saharan African writers aged under 40[13] in the Hay Festival and Rainbow Book Club Africa39 project celebrating Port Harcourt UNESCO World Book Capital 2014.[14]

Works

References

External links