16 Quotes & Sayings By Aminatta Forna

Aminatta Forna was born in Ghana, Africa. She is a writer and ethnographer whose writing has been published widely in magazines and anthologies. Her first book, Mother of Pearl: A Memoir, won the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award from the Association of Black Women Historians. She received her Ph.D from the University of California at Berkeley Read more

She taught at Pomona College and Binghamton University before becoming a professor of English at Rutgers University. In 1998 she won the PEN/Hemingway Award for her first novel, The House on Hope Street. She is a board member of the PEN American Center and serves on the boards of the National Book Critics Circle, the Poetry Society of America, and Poets against Hunger.

A dread filled me, a dread unlike any I had...
1
A dread filled me, a dread unlike any I had ever felt. Not the terror of God, or his angels, but the sickly fear of man. Aminatta Forna
I learned about women -- how we are made into...
2
I learned about women -- how we are made into the women we've become, how we shape ourselves, how we shape each other. Aminatta Forna
3
If you want to know a country, read its writers. Aminatta Forna
4
Yet what use against the deceit of a state are the memories of a child? Aminatta Forna
5
The hollowness in his chest, the tense yearning, the loneliness he braces against, every morning until he can immerse himself in work and forget. Not love. Something else, something with a power that endures. Not love, but a memory of love. Aminatta Forna
6
At the time he had closed in upon himself, denying her a place of entry. She was tenacious, aggressive as a lover, had tried to prise the pieces of him apart. Only when she failed had she finally let go, by then months had passed. She loved like she was going to war, but she was also not the kind of woman to wait for a man. Valiant in battle, noble in defeat. She walked away and never looked back . Aminatta Forna
7
How easily they spoke of love. And yet, when she'd needed the certainty of his feeling for her, he'd let her slip away, never able to bring himself to tell her about the ways in which he'd been changed. He'd been incapable he'd let Nenebah believe the problem lay with her. Aminatta Forna
8
And afterwards, if you had asked any of the survivors how they had managed it, they would not have been able to tell you. It was as if those days in the forest, the escape to the city, had passed in a trance. The mind creates an alternative state. Aminatta Forna
9
War had the effect of encouraging people to try to stay alive. Poverty, too. Survival was simply too hard-won to be given up lightly. Aminatta Forna
10
Adrian's tone suggested that the desire for something was all it took. They all live with endless possibilities, leave their homes for the sake of something new. But the dream is woven from the fabric of freedom. For desire to exist it requires the element of possibility, and that for Kai has never existed, until now... Aminatta Forna
11
[T]hose most precious memories are hidden in the safest place of all. Safe from fire or floods or war. In stories. Stories remembered, until they are ready to be told. Or perhaps simply ready to be heard. Aminatta Forna
12
A life, a history, whole patterns of existence altered, simply by doing nothing. The silent lie. The act of omission. Aminatta Forna
13
He knows nothing about how this will all end, except that it will surely end. He tries to imagine himself into a future, somewhere past this point, but he cannot. There is nothing to do but to keep on existing, in this exact time and place. This is what hell must be like. Waiting without knowing. Not hell, but purgatory. Worse than hell. Aminatta Forna
14
How differently we behave in other peoples countries ... no sooner than we think we can get away with it, we do as we please. It doesn't require the breakdown of a social order. It takes a six-hour plane flight. Aminatta Forna
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What the best novels and novelists do is to offer a different way of seeing. Aminatta Forna