Nigerian writer Lesley Nneka Arimah has won a prestigious prize for her story about a parallel universe where single women go naked until they are married.
ALSO READ: Meet top teacher living her dream 40 years on after turning blind at 9 months
She has been awarded $12,500 (Sh1.3 million) for winning the Caine Prize for African Writing with her story titled ‘Skinned’.
Arimah beat four other African writers, among them Kenyan author Cherrie Kandie with her short story titled ‘Sew My Mouth’.
The panel of judges, led by Kenyan author and poet Peter Kimani, said Arimah’s story was a “unique retake of women’s struggle for inclusion”.
“Lesley Nneka Arimah’s ‘Skinned’ defamiliarises the familiar to topple social hierarchies, challenge traditions and envision new possibilities for women of the world,” said
“Using a sprightly diction, she invents a dystopian universe inhabited by unforgettable characters where friendship is tested, innocence is lost, and readers gain a new understanding of life.”
Go naked
‘Skinned’ follows the fortunes of Ejem, who comes from a culture where girls must remove their clothing at a certain age and go naked until they are claimed by a husband.
ALSO READ: It’s time for equal pay: Women footballers call on industry to ‘get to work’
Arimah, who born in the UK and grew up in Nigeria, told the BBC’s Newsday
“She is quite strange and her strangeness was something her parents had warned her that she should get rid of in order to get married,” Arimah said of her friend.
“When she got married, without compromising, everything that was strange about her was suddenly okay.”
Arimah was also selected for the National Book Foundation’s Five Under 35 and her debut collection “What it Means When A Man Falls From The Sky” won the 2017 Kirkus Prize and the 2017 New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award. It was also selected for the New York Times/PBS book club, among other
Arimah, who lives in Las Vegas, is a 2019 United States Artists Fellow in Writing.
The Caine Prize was launched in 2000 and is awarded annually to an African writer of a short story published in English.
This is a short extract from ‘Skinned’: “She had cried when, at 15, her mother had come into her bedroom and, stroking her hair, told Ejem that it was time to remove her cloth. The only people who could get away with keeping their daughters covered for long were
ALSO READ: I crushed cancer of the blood and lived to tell the tale, Safaricom employee
“But
The other Caine Prize shortlisted stories this year were: Tochukwu Emmanuel Okafor’s ‘All Our Lives’, Ngwah-Mbo Nana Nkweti’s ‘It Takes A Village Some Say’, Cherrie Kandie’s ‘Sew My Mouth’, and Meron Hadero’s ‘The Wall’.
The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Evewoman.co.ke