Words matter. These are the best Tomi Adeyemi Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
The power of fantasy is that you can make people understand the deeper realities of our world in a way that they wouldn’t normally be able to because of all the things in our world that closes them off.
As writers, our craft makes us sit alone at a desk and hammer away at our novel. Doing that day in and day out makes it really easy to forget that there’s a whole community of writers out there, and they love contributing to other writers’ success!
We like epic stories, we like adventure, we like epic fights, so if you can mix a great story that can also really teach someone about a different experience, you have the potential to really help people.
I deeply believed that I wasn’t worthy – that I couldn’t be in the stories even I was creating. I don’t want anyone else to feel like that.
Children of color need a mirror to see themselves in. And then people who don’t have that experience, they need a window. They need a really personalized way to see what people who are different from them are going through.
The knowledge and insights you can get in just one day at a writers’ conference make it worth the trip.
For readers of color, and especially black readers, black girls, I just want them to feel seen. And not just seen – I want them to feel epic and know that they are epic.
The YA author community is generally pretty friendly, and they care.
‘Children of Blood and Bone’ is basically ‘Black Panther’ with magic.
Part of the reason everyone is freaking out over ‘Black Panther’ is because we’ve never seen it. We have two thousand years of stories, and we’ve never seen it.
I didn’t say I have to be a writer, but I did say that I needed to publish at least one book.
I’m a huge ‘Harry Potter’ fan, but I still think there is a lot of anime that is crazier than ‘Harry Potter,’ and that was a seven-book masterpiece.
Any person that you would want to watch your movie or see your show or read your book, there’s a million other things that they could be watching or reading or doing.
I want a little black girl to pick up my book one day and see herself as the star. I want her to know that she’s beautiful, and she matters, and she can have a crazy, magical adventure even if an ignorant part of the world tells her she can never be Hermione Granger.
You’re never wasting your time as long as you learn from every single thing you do, whether you feel like those attempts are successful or not.
I want to give something to the world that I feel I missed out on as a child, and I want to help people of all races, ethnicities, and orientations understand that no matter what differences we may think we have, everyone is a human, and everyone deserves to be respected and valued.
I will always be my hardest critic. Nobody else will ever be able to come at something I do harder than I come at myself.
You can make something out of every unfinished story and every rejection if you work at it.
You don’t realise how cool your culture is until you get out of that phase of trying to fit in.
In my perfect world, we’d have one black girl fantasy book every month. We need them, and we need fantasy stories about black boys as well.
It’s not about creating something that eight billion people would like. It’s about creating something and being able to reach the maybe, like, one million people that would like it a lot.
I had a lot of different reasons for writing the book, but at its core was the desire to write for black teenage girls growing up reading books they were absent from. That was my experience as a child. ‘Children of Blood and Bone’ is a chance to address that. To say you are seen.
If I went to any other college, I probably would have been pre-med. But I felt like I had freedom to do what I wanted to do at Harvard.
At every writers’ conference, you have the opportunity to hear from best-selling authors, top literary agents, and excellent editors who will demystify the publishing industry and give you great advice, no matter where you are in your writing career or what you’re currently struggling with.
You need a community to succeed. In the back of every book is an acknowledgments page full of all the people it took to get that writer to the book you’re holding.
I’ve been writing stories all my life. My very first story had two little black girls riding horses. They were both me, too, so that’s how into me I was.
In terms of people who want to be writers, I wish more people knew how much work it was.
Everyone has a story that they read when they were younger that influenced them.
I spent 12 years of my life writing stories without black people. That’s insane to me. It’s insane that I could have believed in magical portals and dragons and all that stuff, but to believe a black person could be experiencing those things was unimaginable.
Imagination is a funny thing – we sometimes need to see something before we can truly picture it.