I usually make sure that my stories are from Africa or my own background so as to highlight the cultural background at the same time as telling the story.
— Buchi Emecheta
As soon as I finish a book, I sell the paperback rights to different publishers and that's where I recoup my money.
Black women all over the world should re-unite and re-examine the way history has portrayed us.
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.
I like to be called a Nigerian rather than somebody from the Third World or the developing or whatever.
I came to England in 1962 as a very young bride, in my teens, hoping just to stay two years and go back.
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.
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.
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.
I work toward the liberation of women, but I'm not feminist. I'm just a woman.
In all my novels, I deal with the many problems and prejudices which exist for Black people in Britain today.
A hungry man is an angry one.