A Most Anticipated Book of 2025 at The Washington Post, Harper s Bazaar, Marie Claire, Elle, Oprah Daily, Readers Digest, The Seattle Times, LitHub, The Chicago Review of Books, BET, and Radio Times
Innovative . . . . Adichie s attention to hierarchies of language, the misuses of jargon, is one of her superpowers . . . . Dream Count, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie s first novel in a dozen years, is dreamy indeed. An accumulation of scenes and sensations, cloudlike in their contour, floating this way and that against the backdrop of the pandemic that messed up sleep and time itself for us all.
Alexandra Jacobs, The New York Times
Expansive . . . . The lives depicted in Dream Count are linked without being integrated, like tapestries on the four walls of a room . . . . The four women are sympathetic allies, but they tend to be better at diagnosing each others problems than facing their own. That s a very recognizable flaw, and Ms. Adichie treats it as humanely as the rest of this tender and wistful novel.
Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
More than 10 years on from Americanah, this latest book is infused with something new and distinctive in Adichie s prose: a crystal-clear purposefulness, moral and furious . . . . What elevates the story is, as ever, the emotional acuity of Adichie s writing . . . . This latest book is infused with something new and distinctive in Adichie s prose: a crystal-clear purposefulness, moral and furious . . . . In her Author s Note , Adichie admits to seeking to write a wrong in the balance of stories , offering clear-eyed realism, but touched by tenderness . Realism, yes, but tenderness most of all.
Shahidha Bari, Financial Times
Dream Count feels like a homecoming. The Nigerian author s first work of longform fiction in over a decade reminds us of the sharp wisdom and sturdy empathy that have made her one of the most celebrated voices in fiction . . . . Dream Count succeeds because every page is suffused with empathy, and because Adichie s voice is as forthright and clarifying as ever. Reading about each woman, we begin to forget that we re separate from these characters or that their lives belong to fiction. Wieffering, Associated Press
Helen Wieffering, Associated Press
Dream Count is resplendent with Adichie s wry wit.
Bill Coberly, The Bulwark
A rich, complicated book that spans continents and classes . . . . Moving through a comedy of manners and a hall of horrors, [their] stories overlap and intersect in ways that suggest the vast matrix of the African diaspora . . . . The extraordinary sympathy of Adichie s storytelling makes Dream Count deeply compelling . . . . Adichie s descriptions of these relationships are infused with comedy and pathos and a touch of romantic suspense, though the endings are foretold. What remains is the sweet sorrow of what might have been, rendered in language that feels entirely natural and yet instinctively poetic . . . . Adichie makes no effort to snap these four stories together neatly. Instead, the women interact and allude to one another naturally, allowing us periodically to register how they regard each other with sympathy or irritation, friendship or condescension . . . . The lives of Chia, Zikora, Omelogor and Kadiatou unfold here in different tones, but all benefit equally from Adichie s ability to plumb their particular desires, their hopes and anxieties. You can hear that in the way she hones her style to reflect each woman s education and experience . . . . Dream Count compels us to acknowledge, once again, that no story is ever just a single story.
Ron Charles, The Washington Post
"Dream Count reminds you of what made Adichie such a phenomenon in the first place: Those precise sentences; that biting satire; all those vivid, complicated women." Constance Grady, Vox
Composed of the interlocking stories of four women, Chiamaka ( Chia ), Zikora, Omelogor and Kadiatou, it is also quintessential Adichie: ambitious, astute and powered by an accumulation of feather-light sentences that build to devastating weight.
Sara Collins, The Guardian
This is a complex, multi-layered beauty of a book. It is deeply and richly feminist . . . . It explores big themes misogyny, masculinity, race, colonialism, cultural relativism, the abuse of power, both personal and institutional but it does so subtly, almost imperceptibly. The book s lessons on life and the world we inhabit are not thrust didactically at the reader but considered through the profoundly human experiences of her characters . . . . Dream Count is an extraordinary novel.
Nicola Sturgeon, New Statesman
At times, Dream Count reads like a feminist War and Peace . . . . Suffused with truth, wit, and compassion, this is a magnificent novel that understands the messiness of human motivation and is courageous enough to ask difficult questions. It made me feel frustrated about the world but very good about the state of fiction.
Johanna Thomas-Corr, The Times (UK)
Dream Count features the interwoven stories of four women, written in Adichie s vivid, bracing, highly entertaining style. Like Americanah, it is set in the US and Nigeria, and covers the immigrant experience, the sometimes tense dialogue between Africans and African Americans, the Americanisation of language and thought; as well as mother-daughter relationships, friendship, the pressure on women to marry and have children, and aptly late motherhood.
Charlotte Edwardes, The Guardian
Adichie weaves stories of heartbreak and travail that are timely, touching, and trenchant.
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Adichie riffs brilliantly on what feminism means to her characters and renders each woman s story in a distinctive voice . . . . This is well worth the wait.
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Every aspect of this transfixing, intimate, and astute group portrait is ablaze with scorching insights into the maddening absurdities and injustices that continue to plague women s lives . . . . Adichie s magnificently vital, sharply forthright novel will be one of the year s most sought after and resounding titles.
Booklist (starred review)