Memory is a battlefield.
Biography
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.
Key Themes
Quick Facts
- Born
- 1964
- Status
- Living
- Age
- 62 yrs
- Quotes
- 5 collected
Wisdom
Aminatta Forna's Famous Quotes
“Memory is a battlefield.”
— The Memory of Love (2010)
Forna's novel set in post-civil war Sierra Leone — where she grew up and where her own father was executed by the military regime — positions memory as a site of ongoing struggle rather than peaceful archive. Survivors and perpetrators share the same streets and must somehow live together; memory is contested, suppressed, and weaponized. The line captures both the personal cost of traumatic memory and its political importance.
“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)
This insight belongs to the Dutch-American Reformed theologian Lewis B. Smedes, from his landmark book on forgiveness written after his own experience of resentment. Smedes argued that forgiving is not about condoning the harm done but about freeing oneself from the prison of perpetual grievance. While widely recirculated under Forna's name — her novels do deeply explore forgiveness and healing in post-conflict Sierra Leone — the original attribution is Smedes's.
“Love is not a single act, but a habit.”
— The Hired Man (2013)
Forna's novel about a Croatian handyman in a village still scarred by 1990s war argues that love, to be sustaining, requires repetition — it is maintained through small, daily acts rather than secured by a single declaration. The Hired Man, Duro, watches foreigners arrive seeking picturesque European charm while the village's buried history makes every act of repair an act of negotiation with the past.
“We are all haunted by what we do not say.”
— The Memory of Love (2010)
In post-conflict Sierra Leone, where many atrocities were committed by people's neighbors and relatives, silence was the dominant social response. Forna's novel explores how the things left unsaid in families — about complicity, loss, betrayal — continue to shape relationships across generations. The haunting is not supernatural but structural: the unspeakable shapes everything around it.
“The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”
— Widely attributed to Forna; this line originates with Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)
This celebrated epigram is Algernon's line in the first act of Wilde's comedy of manners, where it mocks the Victorian pretension to moral clarity. It circulates under many names online, including Forna's, perhaps because her fiction consistently dramatizes the layered, irresolvable complexity of truth in post-conflict societies. The original attribution to Wilde is well-established and verified in the published play text.
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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.
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