"The fact of storytelling hints at a fundamental human unease, hints at human imperfection. Where there is perfection there is no story to tell." -- Ben Okri
Ben Okri OBE FRSL (born 15 March 1959) is a Nigerian poet and novelist. Having spent his early childhood in London, he and his family returned to Nigeria in 1968. He later came back to England, embarking on studies at the University of Essex. He has received honorary doctorates from the University of Westminster (1997) and the University of Essex (2002), and was awarded an OBE in 2001.
Since he published his first novel, Flowers and Shadows (1980), Okri has risen to an international acclaim, and he is often described as one of Africa's greatest writers. His best known work, The Famished Road, was awarded the 1991 Booker Prize. He has also won the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa, the Aga Khan Prize for Fiction, and was given a Crystal Award by the World Economic Forum. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
He has also been described as a magic realist, although he has shrugged off that tag. His first-hand experiences of civil war in Nigeria are said to have inspired many of his works. He writes about both the mundane and the metaphysical, the individual and the collective, drawing the reader into a world with vivid descriptions.
Okri is a Vice-President of the English Centre for the International PEN, an association of writers with 130 branches in over 100 countries. He is also a member of the United Kingdom's Royal National Theatre. He lives in London.
After a 5 year break, Okri's eleventh book, Starbook was published by Rider. Tales of Freedom, a novella and collection of short stories was published in 2009.
"Don't despair too much if you see beautiful things destroyed, if you see them perish. Because the best things are always growing in secret.""I lived rough, by my wits, was homeless, lived on the streets, lived on friends' floors, was happy, was miserable.""I was going to be a scientist.""I went to London because, for me, it was the home of literature. I went there because of Dickens and Shakespeare.""Magic becomes art when it has nothing to hide.""Our time here is magic! It's the only space you have to realize whatever it is that is beautiful, whatever is true, whatever is great, whatever is potential, whatever is rare, whatever is unique, in. It's the only space.""Politics is the art of the possible; creativity is the art of the impossible.""Reading, like writing, is a creative act. If readers only bring a narrow range of themselves to the book, then they'll only see their narrow range reflected in it.""Stories can conquer fear, you know. They can make the heart bigger.""The acknowledged legislators of the world take the world as given. They dislike mysteries, for mysteries cannot be coded, or legislated, and wonder cannot be made into law. And so these legislators police the accepted frontiers of things.""The greatest religions convert the world through stories.""The higher the artist, the fewer the gestures. The fewer the tools, the greater the imagination. The greater the will, the greater the secret failure.""The magician and the politician have much in common: they both have to draw our attention away from what they are really doing.""The most authentic thing about us is our capacity to create, to overcome, to endure, to transform, to love and to be greater than our suffering.""We have fallen into this very mean description of humanity. Naturalism in fiction is too reductive in its definition of human beings.""You see, I was told stories, we were all told stories as kids in Nigeria. We had to tell stories that would keep one another interested, and you weren't allowed to tell stories that everybody else knew. You had to dream up new ones."