
Audio By Carbonatix
One of Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's toddler twins has died, her family has confirmed.
An official family statement said that 21-month-old boy Nkanu Nnamdi, who the novelist had with her husband Dr Ivara Esege, died on Wednesday after a brief illness.
Issued on behalf of the family by Omawumi Ogbe, the statement said they were "devastated by this profound loss", and thanked well-wishers while also asking for privacy and prayers.
Award-winning US-based writer Adichie is known for works including Half of a Yellow Sun, Americanah, and her 2012 TED Talk and essay, "We Should All Be Feminists," which was sampled by Beyoncé on her 2013 song "Flawless."
A key figure in postcolonial feminist literature, she explores themes of gender and immigration.
In 2015, she was listed among Time Magazine's 100 most influential people.
Adichie, 48, had her first child, a daughter, in 2016. In 2024, her twin boys were born using a surrogate.
Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu is among those to have expressed his condolences, saying "no grief is as devastating as losing a child".
"I empathise with the family at this difficult time," he said in a statement on X.
In 2020, her 2006 novel Half of a Yellow Sun was voted the best book to have won the Women's Prize for Fiction in its 25-year history.
Speaking to the BBC last year, around the release of her novel Dream Count, she stressed how she wanted her books to be read in Africa.
She also explained how the writer's block she had experienced while pregnant with her first child was "terrifying".
"It's a really frightening place to be, because writing is the thing that gives me meaning," the acclaimed author told Emma Barnett.
In 2022, in a BBC lecture on freedom of speech, the writer said young people were growing up "afraid to ask questions for fear of asking the wrong questions".
Such a climate could lead to "the death of curiosity, the death of learning and the death of creativity", she said during one of the BBC's annual Reith lectures.
"No human endeavour requires freedom as much as creativity does," she added.
Latest Stories
-
Venezuela welcomes 1,600 foreign rescuers in urgent search for quake survivors
19 minutes -
From local stories to global decisions: Why the G7 Summit 2026 matters
26 minutes -
No health system can function effectively without well-trained pharmaceutical workforce – Asantehene
54 minutes -
MTN Chairman Mcebisi Jonas blames state failure for rising anti-foreigner sentiment in South Africa
1 hour -
Ghana deploys 47 health workers to Saint Kitts and Nevis under migration initiative
2 hours -
Telecel Foundation donates life-saving equipment to Kumasi South Hospital, signs 2-year adoption MoU
3 hours -
“Law and politics run in parallel channels” — Barker-Vormawor on ECOWAS ruling in Torkornoo case
3 hours -
Getrude Torkornoo’s claims of unfair trial lacks basis – Twum-Barimah
3 hours -
Benjamin Asare: From late bloomer to Black Stars’ rising wall
3 hours -
Removal of Getrude Torkornoo has always been political – Suame MP
3 hours -
Agenda 111: Barker-Vormawor urges Ken Agyapong to speak so alleged corrupt deals can be investigated
3 hours -
Choosing Athletics over football was the best decision of my life – Patience Okon George
3 hours -
CONFIRMED: Sedina Tamakloe-Attionu arrived in Nsawam on Wednesday, June 24
4 hours -
Suame MP praises former Chief Justice Torkornoo after ECOWAS Court ruling
4 hours -
Suame MP urges evidence-based discipline in NPP as “Ken must go” protest fallout deepens party tensions
4 hours