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Aminatta Forna
inspiration

Aminatta Forna

b. 1964

5Quotes
5Themes
62Age

About Aminatta Forna

Aminatta Forna (born 1964) is a Sierra Leonean-British author and essayist whose fiction and memoir explore the aftermath of conflict, trauma, and memory in West Africa and beyond. Born in Scotland to a Scottish mother and Sierra Leonean father — the prominent reformist politician Mohamed Forna, who was executed by the Sierra Leone government in 1975 — she was raised across Britain, Sierra Leone, Iran, and Thailand. Her memoir *The Devil That Danced on the Water* (2002) documents her adult search for the truth of her father's death and execution.

Her novels — *Ancestor Stones* (2006), *The Memory of Love* (2010), and *The Hired Man* (2013) — examine how communities process and survive political violence. She has taught at Georgetown University and Columbia University, and was awarded the Windham-Campbell Prize in 2017. Her essay collection *The Window Seat* (2021) received wide praise.

To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover the prisoner was you.

Aminatta Forna

Quick Facts

Born
1964
Age
62 years
Domain
inspiration
Quotes
5 collected
Key Themes
ForgivenessLoveMemorySilenceTruth

Aminatta Forna's Famous Quotes

5 quotes

To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover the prisoner was you.

Widely attributed to Forna; this line originates with theologian Lewis B. Smedes, Forgive and Forget (1984)

Forgiveness

Love is not a single act, but a habit.

The Hired Man (2013)

Love

Memory is a battlefield.

The Memory of Love (2010)

Memory

We are all haunted by what we do not say.

The Memory of Love (2010)

Silence

The truth is rarely pure and never simple.

Widely attributed to Forna; this line originates with Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)

Truth

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Frequently Asked Questions

Aminatta Forna (born 1964) is a Sierra Leonean-British author and essayist whose fiction and memoir explore the aftermath of conflict, trauma, and memory in West Africa and beyond. Born in Scotland to a Scottish mother and Sierra Leonean father — the prominent reformist politician Mohamed Forna, who was executed by the Sierra Leone government in 1975 — she was raised across Britain, Sierra Leone, Iran, and Thailand. Her memoir *The Devil That Danced on the Water* (2002) documents her adult search for the truth of her father's death and execution. Her novels — *Ancestor Stones* (2006), *The Memory of Love* (2010), and *The Hired Man* (2013) — examine how communities process and survive political violence. She has taught at Georgetown University and Columbia University, and was awarded the Windham-Campbell Prize in 2017. Her essay collection *The Window Seat* (2021) received wide praise. Aminatta Forna lived b. 1964.