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Who I Always Was

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For fans of Aftershocks and How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America, a gripping and deeply honest memoir in essays, this debut collection sets out to answer the universal question of: Why am I like this?
When Theresa Okokon was nine, her father traveled to his hometown in Nigeria to attend his mother's funeral...and never returned. His mysterious death shattered Theresa as her family's world unraveled. Now a storyteller and television cohost, Okokon sets out to explore the ripple effects of that profound loss and the way heartache shapes our sense of self and of the world—for the rest of our lives.

Using her grief and her father's death as a backdrop, Okokon delves deeply into intrinsic themes of Blackness, African spirituality, family, abandonment, belonging, and the seemingly endless, unrequited romantic pursuits of a Black woman who came of age as a Black girl in Wisconsin suburbs where she was—in many ways—always an anomaly.
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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2024

      Okokon, a Pushcart Prize-nominated essayist, debuts with an essay collection that ponders questions of grief, family, abandonment, Blackness, African spirituality, and coming of age. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2024
      The challenges of coming-of-age as the child of African parents in suburban Wisconsin.Okokon's debut essay collection gets off to a rocky start with a prologue titled "Borrowed Context" that uses extensive footnotes to elaborate on basic information about the author's family's geographical roots: mother from Ghana, father from Nigeria, author born in Chicago, raised in Wisconsin. The footnotes are voluminous and printed in a way that makes the essay difficult to follow. It is a relief to find that this technique is dropped in the next section, which introduces one of the major themes of the book, the author's relationships with the opposite sex, kindergarten through early 40s (she remains single). She weaves in a second throughline, about her emerging sense of herself as Black. So, in high school, when the author is rejected by a clique of American-born Black girls and gets involved with what she calls "Ghetto Whiteboys," she tells us, "consciously or not, their desire to date me was likely related to their fetishization of Black women or their desire to create proximity to a culture they coveted." Elsewhere: "Playing into the unquestioned cisgender binaries and presumed straightness of the nineties, we lined up boy, girl, boy, girl." To that, LOL, as Okokon might say. This is a very millennial book, not just in its application of an identity politics lens, but also in its use of "tbh" and "::hard shrug::" and other textisms, in thanking Facebook and Instagram in the acknowledgments, and in its frequent recourse to Google. ("I was just your average second child--and a quick scroll through Google will tell you that we are rebellious peacemakers.") A fascinating storyline about her father's mysterious death on a trip to Nigeria remains as frustrating to the reader as it is to the author. How can it be that with all her investigation and with her mother's stated willingness to answer questions, "I still wonder what story she believes about his death." We do too.Honest, vulnerable, earnest reflections that stop somewhere short of compelling.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from January 1, 2025
      Okokon's memoir in essays is a deceptively lighthearted roller-coaster ride that takes readers through laughter, tears, and deep reflection. Imagine the wit of Nora Ephron colliding with the raw honesty of Roxane Gay, and you'll get a sense of Okokon's brilliant storytelling. At the heart of this account is Okokon's journey as a first-generation Nigerian and Ghanaian in America. She tackles cultural identity, politics, and the often-complicated search for belonging with such ease, it feels like chatting with a close friend, one who isn't afraid to get real and who can make you laugh at the absurdity of life's harsher moments. Whether she's talking about family expectations, family secrets, or the painful reality of being caught between cultures, Okokon's voice is refreshingly honest and, at times, heartbreakingly relatable. This a gift for anyone who's ever felt like they don't quite fit in. It explores the immigrant experience with a warmth that makes readers feel seen, and the humor will keep them hooked from start to finish. Readers will revel in the humor and pathos and be unable to set this down. Who I Always Was is a gem that will leave readers reflecting long after the last page.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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