1.
I always value my large kitchen because it was better to do everything there, you wash up, you do everything, rather than messing up another room and I pop my typewriter just next to it. So I still write now but I was doing more writing when the children were younger.
Buchi Emecheta
2.
I am a woman and a woman of Africa. I am a daughter of Nigeria and if she is in shame, I shall stayand mourn with her in shame.
Buchi Emecheta
3.
But who made the law that we should not hope in our daughters? We women subscribe to that law more than anyone. Until we change all this, it is still a man's world, which women will always help to build.
Buchi Emecheta
4.
The first book I wrote was The Bride Price which was a romantic book, but my husband burnt the book when he saw it. I was the typical African woman, I'd done this privately, I wanted him to look at it, approve it and he said he wouldn't read it.
Buchi Emecheta
5.
I work toward the liberation of women, but I'm not feminist. I'm just a woman.
Buchi Emecheta
6.
Black women all over the world should re-unite and re-examine the way history has portrayed us.
Buchi Emecheta
7.
I'm not just a feminist - I'm a feminist plus.
Buchi Emecheta
8.
A hungry man is an angry one.
Buchi Emecheta
9.
Women should not be suppressed because they are women, because they have children and because of men. Then I am a feminist. But when it comes to the African concept, for the moment, I say 'feminist plus'. We have so many other problems.
Buchi Emecheta
10.
I believe it is important to speak to your readers in person... to enable people to have a whole picture of me; I have to both write and speak. I view my role as writer and also as oral communicator.
Buchi Emecheta
11.
When I came to England it wasn't what it is now, then the black people were very rarely strong. I had a personal shock because England wasn't what I expected it to be... where people lived like Jane Austen.
Buchi Emecheta
12.
Few things are as bad as a guilty conscience.
Buchi Emecheta
13.
Being a woman writer, I would be deceiving myself if I said I write completely through the eye of a man. There's nothing bad in it, but that does not make me a feminist writer. I hate that name. The tag is from the Western world - like we are called the Third World.
Buchi Emecheta
14.
In all my novels, I deal with the many problems and prejudices which exist for Black people in Britain today.
Buchi Emecheta
15.
I was a threat to a lot of women and to a lot of men. The women cannot forgive me if I remain single and also have a family. But I have a family as well and am raising them. A lot of women only stay in their marriages because of the children so seeing me on my own annoys them.
Buchi Emecheta
16.
I came to England in 1962 as a very young bride, in my teens, hoping just to stay two years and go back.
Buchi Emecheta
17.
I like to be called a Nigerian rather than somebody from the Third World or the developing or whatever.
Buchi Emecheta
18.
Men blackmailing you as a woman leads you to trivialise sex and say 'it's not important, what is important is myself as a person, no one owns me because of sex.'
Buchi Emecheta
19.
As soon as I finish a book, I sell the paperback rights to different publishers and that's where I recoup my money.
Buchi Emecheta