Chibundu Onuzo

Published: Feb. 23, 2020, 1 p.m.

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Michael Berkeley talks to author Chibundu Onuzo about the challenge of writing novels while studying for her A-levels, and the role of music and faith in her life.

At the age of nineteen, Chibundu became the youngest female writer ever to be signed by Faber and Faber. She started writing aged ten while growing up in Lagos, Nigeria and was working on her first novel, \\u2018The Spider King\\u2019s Daughter\\u2019, while doing her A-levels at boarding school in England. It was published while she was still at university and was shortlisted for a host of prizes \\u2013 winning a 2013 Betty Trask Award. Her second novel, \\u2018Welcome to Lagos\\u2019, was published in 2017 to great acclaim.

Chibundu talks to Michael Berkeley about growing up in Lagos, and the challenge of adapting to life at boarding school in Britain. She chooses a carol, \\u2018I Wonder as I Wander\\u2019, that she sang with her school choir in Winchester Cathedral. The soundtrack to a Nigerian television advert from the 1990s speaks to her about the tensions between western and traditional values in Nigeria. We hear a miniature by Christian Petzold that will be familiar to anyone who has ever learned the piano, alongside music from Handel and from Dvorak\\u2019s Symphony No 9, \\u2018From the New World\\u2019.

And, in a special moment for Private Passions, Chibundu is joined in the studio by members of her family to sing a setting of Psalm 23 by her uncle, Bishop Ken Okeke.

Produced by Jane Greenwood.\\nA Loftus production for BBC Radio 3.

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