“When
I write, I have a sort of secret kinship of readers in all countries who don't
know each other but each of whom, when they read my book, feels at home in it.
So I write for those readers. It's almost a sense of writing for a specific
person, but it's a specific person who I don't know.”
– Teju Cole
A writer, photographer, and art
historian, Cole was born on this date in 1975 in Kalamazoo, MI, to Nigerian
parents, the oldest of four children. After growing up in Lagos, Nigeria, Cole
moved back to the United States at the age of 17 to attend college and never
left the U.S. again. He is a 1996
graduate of Kalamazoo College.
He has authored several books,
including the multiple award-winning Open
City, a terrific story of a young Nigerian immigrant in Manhattan. Cole’s essays, creative photography, and use
of social media also have drawn the attention of numerous critics and other
writers. Salman Rushdie called him “the
most gifted of today’s younger generation of writers.” Cole currently serves as distinguished writer
in residence at Bard College and is a regular contributor to The New York Times and The New Yorker. He’s attracted a worldwide following for his
interesting and thoughtful almost daily – some label them “poetic” – posts on
Twitter.
“I'm not trying to be a poet on
Twitter,” he said. “I'm trying to be
aware of the fact that a very simple sentence, well written, can have a very
moving effect without that person knowing why.
(As a reader) There's a deep genetic part of you that somehow, even
without your permission, recognizes good language when it arrives.”
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